Psychoanalysis Flashcards
A Paradigm is -
- a grand or overarching theory that explains human behaviour.
- a framework that helps us to understand persons and conduct research.
5 major paradigms (in historical order) -
- psychoanalysis
- behaviourism
- humanism
- cognitive psych
- systems theory
3 schools of psychology
- Psychoanalysis (led by Freud) - The unconscious and determinism
- Behaviourism, a reaction to Psychoanalysis.
Only what you can measure, shaping behaviour. - Humanism, a reaction to both.
Belief in human potential to determine and live meaningful lives.
PSYCHOANALYSIS
The theory of psychoanalysis -
Helps us understand people and treat their internal conflicts.
Qualities of psychoanalysis -
-Intra-psychic •Conflictual •Deterministic •Importance of early childhood •Unconscious •Anxiety •Importance of instincts or drives as motivators.
Personality -
- a psychological construct
- an abstract term we use to describe something we cannot touch
Personality is the dynamic organisation within the individual of the various human domains that determine a person’s typical behaviours, emotions, and thoughts.
Personality is a pattern of relatively permanent traits and unique characteristics that give both consistency and individuality to a person’s behaviour.
Traits contribute to individual differences in behaviour. They can be unique, common to some group, shared by the entire species but their pattern is different for each person.
Characteristics - unique qualities that include temperament, physique and intelligence.
3 focal points of personality -
- structure - contents that make our person, qualities, personality factors, traits ex: shy, dominant etc
- dynamics - how these contents fit together and relate to one another
- development - how these qualities grow, change or remain the same ex: childhood, adulthood.
Physical domain -
Our body and how we experience it.
Our body influences how we feel, how we behave, what we think - making it a part of our personality.
- height, weight, body shape, looks…
Emotional domain -
- what we feel, feelings in different situations.
Cognitive domain -
- how we think (logical, impulsive etc), our thought processes, how we explain our actions and thoughts.
behavioural domain -
- how we behave, relate, talk, walk, dress, mannerisms.
Spiritual domain -
- beliefs, meaning of life and experiences, purpose of life, values.
Why study personality ?
To -
- understand
- predict
- treat
Nature vs nurture debate -
Were we born with our personality or is shaped through experiences during our childhood?
Nature - more fixed, less prone to change, more biological.
Implications on - training (are leaders born or made?), psychotherapy, mental illness, criminals, intelligence.
personality psychologists do -
- psychotherapy
- assessment
- research
- theorising
Theory - a set of related assumptions.
A scientific theory that is a set of related assumptions that allows scientists to use logical deductive reasoning to form testable hypothesis. A single assumption can never serve to integrate several observations. Isolated assumptions can neither generate meaningful hypotheses nor possess internal consistency.
Components of theory - not proven facts, but accepted as if they were true.
Logical deductive reasoning - used by researchers to form a hypo. It is the logical process from one or more statements to reach a logical conclusion.
Inductive reasoning - makes broad generalisations from specific observations. There is data and then conclusions are drawn from that data.