W2 Flashcards
Psychoanalysis
A distinctive form of psychological treatment and a model of psychological functioning, human development, and psychopathology; founded by Sigmund Freud
Unconscious Motivation
Wishes, fantasies or tacit knowledge that are outside of awareness and motivate all human beings (in part)
Why do Psychoanalysts seek to facilitate awareness of unconscious motivations?
To increase individual choice
Freud’s Definition of the Unconscious
An area of psychic functioning in which impulses and wishes, as well as certain memories, are split off from awareness. This occurs because either the associated affects are too threatening or the content of the impulses and wishes themselves are learned by the individual to be unacceptable through cultural conditioning.
A Modern Consensus on the Unconscious
Our experience and actions are influenced by psychological processes that are not part of our conscious awareness. These unconscious processes are kept out of awareness in order to avoid psychological pain.
Primary Process
A raw or primitive form of psychic functioning. Operates unconsciously throughout the lifetime. Features no distinctions between past, present, and future. Hence, different feelings/experiences can be condensed together into one image/symbol; feelings can be expressed metaphorically, and the identities of different people can be merged. Infants operate in this mode as part of normal development. Operates throughout childhood (and adulthood in dreams and fantasy), as well as more consistently in individuals suffering from acute psychosis.
Secondary Process
The style of psychic functioning associated with consciousness. Logical, sequential, and orderly. The foundation for rational, reflective thinking.
Defenses
Intrapsychic processes that function to avoid emotional pain by pushing thoughts, wishes, feelings, or fantasies out of awareness. Methods in which the unconscious protects the conscious self (sometimes used by the ego to moderate id/superego). Usually involves some distortion of reality. Distinct from conscious coping mechanisms.
Intellectualization as a Defense
Talking about something threatening while keeping an emotional distance from the feelings associated with it (i.e., focusing on facts over feelings, speaking practically)
Projection as a Defense
Attributing a threatening feeling or motive one is experiencing to another person.
Reaction Formation as a Defense
Denying a threatening feeling and proclaiming to feel the opposite.
Splitting as a Defense
[Important to Kleinian Theory] - Avoiding one’s perception of another as good being contaminated by negative feelings through splitting the representation of the other into two different images; good and bad. Believed to be used by infants to preserve their feelings of safety with their mother. Can lead to dramatic fluctuations in one’s perceptions of others.
Freud’s Definition of Transference
“Transferring” a template from the past onto the present dynamic with the therapist (i.e., a client with a violent father might begin to see the therapist as violent). First conceptualized by Freud as a barrier to treatment and a form of resistance. Later conceptualized as an opportunity to help the client understand how past relationships were influencing their experience of the present in an emotionally immediate way.
The Distinction between One- Versus Two-Person Psychologies
One: Views the therapist as an objective/neutral observer who serves as a blank screen onto whom the client projects their transference.
Two: The therapist and client are co-participants who engage in an ongoing process of mutual influence at both conscious and unconscious levels. The therapist should be aware of their own ongoing contribution to the interaction (e.g., might play a role in the emergence of resistance).
The Causes of Psychoanalysis’ Declining Fortune
The increasingly biological focus of psychiatry.
The rise of the cognitive-behavioral tradition.
The negative reaction to the arrogant/insular/elitist attitude that was associated with the psychoanalytic tradition.
The domain’s lack of receptiveness to valid criticism and empirical research.
The growing emphasis on evidence-based treatment.
The “quick-fix mentality”.
Free Association
A technique in which clients are encouraged to suspend their self-critical function and verbalize thoughts, images, associations, and feelings that are on the edge of awareness (i.e., saying everything that comes to mind without censoring)
The Influence of Josef Breuer on Psychoanalysis
“The Talking Cure” - Symptom relief through talking freely about traumatic experiences and recovering painful memories that had been dissociated.
Seduction Theory/Psychosexual Theory
Freud’s early belief that sexual trauma/instinctual sexuality always lies at the root of psychological problems.
He later modified this belief to allow for the fact that memory is reconstructive; and that early repressed sexual desires could result in false, recovered memories of sexual trauma - with similar psychological consequences.
Libido
A type of psychic energy that is linked in a complex way to sexuality. Can be activated by both external and internal stimuli, which in turn produce an organismic sense of tension or “unpleasure.” Maintaining psychic energy at a constant level is a biological imperative, so this activated energy subsequently needs to be discharged to restore equilibrium (pleasurable tension reduction).
The Pleasure Principle
A psychobiological push to repeat experiences that have become associated with tension reduction. Underlined by the model of motivation/drive theory; wherein individuals are motivated to satisfy these urges to maintain homeostasis
Jung’s Definition of Emotional Complexes
Affectively charged ideas that are repressed because they are emotionally threatening.
Primary Theoretical Disagreements between Jung and Freud
Jung believed Freud was mistaken in viewing sexuality as the most important motivational principle, and that Freud’s view of the unconscious was one-sided and failed to recognize the more creative and growth-oriented aspects of unconscious processes. He also felt that Freud failed to recognize the importance of the spiritual and transpersonal aspects of the human psyche. [Subsequently founded Analytical/Jungian psychology as his own school of psychotherapy]
Freud’s Definition of the Id
The aspect of the psyche that is instinctually based and present from birth.
Freud’s Definition of the Ego
A psychic agency that keeps aspects of experience deriving from the more primitive, instinctually based aspect of the psyche (the id) out of awareness.
Gradually emerges out of the id and functions to represent the concerns of reality. While the id presses for immediate sexual gratification, the ego evaluates the suitability of the situation for satisfying one’s instinctual desires, and it allows the individual to delay instinctual gratification or find other ways of channeling instinctual needs in a socially acceptable fashion. One important function of the ego is to mediate between the demands of the id and the superego.
Freud’s Definition of the Superego
The psychic agency that emerges due to the internalization of social values and norms. Some aspects are conscious, others are not. Often becomes overly harsh and demanding, and can lead to self-destructive feelings of guilt and the rejection of one’s own instinctual needs and wishes. One goal of analysis has been to help individuals become more aware of the overly harsh nature of their superegos, so they become less self-punitive.
Object Relations Theory
A theory concerned with the way in which we develop internal representations of our relationships with significant others. Stems primarily from the work of Melanie Klein.