Week 2 Flashcards
libido
The instinctual drives of the id and the source of psychic energy; Freudian notion of the life instincts.
life instincts
Instincts oriented toward growth, development, and creativity that serve the purpose of the survival of the individual and the human race.
death instincts
A Freudian concept that refers to a tendency of individuals to harbor an unconscious wish to die or hurt themselves or others; accounts for the aggressive drive.
Structure of Personality
Id - ruled by the pleasure principle
Superego - ruled by the judicial branch
Ego - ruled by the reality principle
Anxiety Types
- Anxiety - feeling of dread that results from repressed feelings, memories, desires and experiences that emerge to the surface of awareness
- Reality Anxiety - the fear of danger from the external world and the level of such anxiety is proportionate to the degree of real threat
- Neurotic Anxiety - the fear that the instincts will get out of hand and cause the person to do something for which she or he will be punished
Moral Anxiety - the fear of ones own conscience
Ego-Defense Mechanisms
Repression, Denial, Reaction Formation, Projection, Displacement, Rationalization, Sublimation, Regression, Introjection, Identification, Compensation
Psychosexual Stages
Oral
Anal
Phallic
Psychsocial Stages
Crisis
Classical Psychoanalysis - id psychology
Comtemporary Psychoanalysis - ego psychology
transference relationship
The transfer of feelings originally experienced in an early relationship to other important people in a person’s present environment.
free association
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Psychodynamic therapy
Psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy involves a shortening and simplifying of the lengthy process of psychoanalysis.
relational analysis
An analytic model based on the assumption that therapy is an interactive process between client and therapist. The interpersonal analyst assumes that countertransference is a source of information about the client’s character and dynamics.
Transference
The client’s unconscious shifting to the therapist of feelings and fantasies, both positive and negative, that are displacements from reactions to significant others from the client’s past.
countertransference
The therapist’s unconscious emotional responses to a client that are likely to interfere with objectivity; unresolved conflicts of the therapist that are projected onto the client.
Interpretation
A technique used to explore the meanings of free association, dreams, resistances, and transference feelings.
Dream analysis
A technique for uncovering unconscious material and giving clients insight into some of their unresolved problems. Therapists participate with clients in exploring dreams and in interpreting possible meanings.
Latent content
Our hidden, symbolic, and unconscious motives, wishes, and fears.
Manifest content
The dream as it appears to the dreamer.
dream work
The process by which the latent content of a dream is transformed into the less threatening manifest content.
Resistance
The client’s reluctance to bring to awareness threatening unconscious material that has been repressed.
analytical psychology
An elaborate explanation of human nature that combines ideas from history, mythology, anthropology, and religion.
Freud’s view of human nature
According to Freud, behaviour is determined by irrational forces, unconscious motivations, and biological and instinctual drives. Freud’s view was that the major challenge of human life was to manage these instincts, or drives, and that our personality develops through this struggle and is reflected in the way in which we satisfy a range of urges stemming from these basic impulses:
'Life instincts' are those essential to human survival, growth, development, and creativity, as well as sexual energy and all pleasurable acts (libido), that promote constructive behaviours 'Death instincts' are those related to aggressive tendencies and destructiveness.