Chapter 13 Flashcards
Personality
The pattern of enduring, distinctive characteristics that produce consistency and individuality in a person.
Psychodynamic approaches to personality
Approaches that assume that personality is primarily unconscious and motivated by inner forces and complex about which people have little awareness.
Psychoanalytic theory
Freud’s theory that unconscious forces act as determinants of personality.
Unconscious
A part of the personality that contains the memories, knowledge, believes, feelings, urges, drives, and instincts of which the individual is not aware.
Id
The raw, unorganized, inborn part of personality whose sole purpose is to reduce tension created by primitive desires related to hunger, sex, aggression, and irrational impulses.
Ego
The part of the personality that produces a buffer between the id and the outside world.
Superego
The personality structure that harshly judges the morality of our behavior.
Psychosexual stages
Developmental periods that children pass through during which the encounter conflicts between the demands of society and their own sexual urges.
Fixations
Conflicts or concerns that persist beyond the developmental period in which they first occur.
Oral stage
According to Freud, a stage from birth to age 12 to 18 months, in which an infants center of pleasure is the mouth.
Anal stage
According to Freud, a stage from age 12 to 18 months to three years of age, in which a child’s pleasure is centered on the anus.
Phallic stage
A period beginning around age 3 during which a child pleasure focuses on the genitals.
Oedipal conflict
A child intense interest in his or her opposite sex parent.
Identification
The process of wanting to be like another person as much as possible, imitating that person’s behavior and adopting similar beliefs and values.
Latency Period
According to Freud, the period between the phallic stage and puberty during which children’s sexual concerns are temporarily put aside.