6. psychodynamic approach Flashcards
give 3 assumptions of the psychodynamic approach
- our unconscious mind (i.e. the ID & the superego) governs our behaviour
- psychic determinism is true (i.e our behaviour is motivated by urges & instincts: uncontrollable unconscious internal psychosexual conflicts (i.e. the ID & superego) which are rooted in our childhood experiences)
- different parts of our psyche are in constant conflict
THE ROLE OF THE UNCONSCIOUS
The conscious mind is the part of our mind that we know about and are aware of.
Most of our mind is made up of the unconscious-a vast storehouse of biological drives and instincts that has a significant influence on our behaviour and personality.
The unconscious also contains
threatening and disturbing memories that have been repressed or locked away and forgotten these can be accessed during dreams or through ‘slips of the tongue’.
Under the surface of our conscious mind is the preconscious which contains
thoughts and memories which are not currently in conscious awareness, but we can access if desired.
THE STRUCTURE OF PERSONALITY
Freud described personality as ‘tripartite’, composed of three parts:
THE ID
THE EGO
THE SUPEREGO
THE SUPEREGO
is formed at the end of the phallic stage, around the age of five. It is our internalised sense of right and wrong.
Based on the morality principle it represents the moral standards of the child’s same-gender parent and punishes the Ego for wrongdoing (through guilt).
THE EGO
works on the reality principle and is the mediator between the other two parts of the personality. The Ego develops around the age of two years and its role is to reduce the conflict between the demands of the Id and the Superego it manages this by employing a number of defence mechanisms.
THE ID
is the primitive part of personality operates on the pleasure principle - the Id gets what it wants. It is a mass of unconscious drives and instincts.
Only the Id is present at birth throughout life the Id is entirely selfish and demands instant gratification of its needs.
name the 5 psychosexual stages
oral stage, anal stage, phallic stage, latent stage, genital stage
ORAL (0-1 YRS)
focus of pleasure and consequence
Mouth - breast can be the object of desire
Oral fixation - smoking, biting nails.
ANAL (1-3 YRS)
focus of pleasure and consequence
Anus - child gains pleasure from withholding and expelling faeces
Anal retentive - perfectionist, obsessive
Anal expulsive - thoughtless, messy
PHALLIC 3-6 (YRS)
focus of pleasure and consequence
Genital area - Oedipus / Electra complexes start
Phallic personality - narcissistic, reckless.
LATENCY
focus of pleasure and consequence
None - earlier conflicts are repressed.
GENITAL
focus of pleasure and consequence
Sexual desires become conscious alongside the onset of puberty
Difficulty forming homosexual relationships
Each stage (apart from latency) is marked by a different conflict that the child must resolve in order to progress successfully to the next stage. Any psychosexual conflict that is unresolved leads to
fixation where the child becomes stuck’ and carries certain behaviours and conflicts associated with that stage through to adult life.
DEFENCE MECHANISMS
The Ego has a difficult job balancing the conflicting demands of the Id and the Superego, but it does have help in the form of defence mechanisms - these are
unconscious and ensure that the Ego is able to prevent us from being overwhelmed by temporary threats or traumas.