psychodynamic - evaluation Flashcards
1
Q
It has explanatory power
A
- Although Freud’s theory is controversial and often bizarre, it has had huge influence on Western psychology
- It has been used to explain a wide range of behaviours (moral and mental disorders) and drew attention to the influence of
childhood on adult personality - Had a positive impact on psychology
2
Q
It has practical applications - psychoanalysis
A
- Freud introduced psychoanalysis as a new form of therapy = designed to access the unconscious mind using a range of techniques such as dream analysis
- Psychoanalysis is most suitable for individuals suffering from mild neurosis (e.g. depression) but has been criticised as inappropriate for people with severe mental disorders such as schizophrenia
3
Q
It recognises both nature and nurture
A
- it proposes that we are driven by innate, biological instincts (nature) but the way they are expressed is shaped by our social environment (nurture)
4
Q
Freud’s case study of Little Hans has been criticised
A
- Freud’s ideas = small number of case studies → It is not possible to make universal claims about human nature based on such a limited sample
- Freud’s observations were detailed and carefully recorded
- highly subjective, and it is unlikely that any other researcher would have drawn the same conclusion
- researcher bias since Freud interpreted the data in a way that supported his theory
- lacked scientific rigour
5
Q
It includes a lot of untestable concepts
A
- Karl Popper argued that the theory is not falsifiable - if people behave in the way predicted by the theory it is viewed as support, if they don’t it is argued that they are using defence mechanisms
- Many of Freud’s concepts occur at an unconscious level, making them difficult to test = used case studies
- This is why the psychodynamic theory has the status of
pseudoscience (‘fake’ science) rather than real science
6
Q
It is based on psychic determinism
A
- The psychodynamic approach explains all behaviour as
determined by unconscious conflicts that are rooted in childhood - Even something as apparently random as a ‘slip of the tongue’ is driven by unconscious forces and has deep symbolic meaning
- This is an extreme determinist stance and suggests that free will may have no influence on behaviour