founders review

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Founders Review 1. According to Freud, what is the third psychosexual stage (age 3-6)? How is it resolved? Answer: Phallic, identification with same sex parent 2. Name that defense mechanism: - The defense mechanism that underlies all the rest. - repression - Acting the opposite of how you feel - Reaction formation - Addressing problem from an emotionless perspective - intellectualization - Redirecting feelings to a less-threatening object - displacement - Accusing others of unacceptable desire you are having. - Projection 3. Name that person: - Neo-Freudian that created birth order theories and focused on feelings of inferiority (Adler) - founder of trait theory (Allport) - father of psychoanalysis. (Freud) - first to suggest introversion and extraversion as underlying personality traits (Jung) - proposed theories of basic anxiety and womb envy as determinants of personality (Horney) - proposed theory of collective unconscious (Jung)

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Founders Review. According to Freud, what is the third psychosexual stage (age 3-6)? How is it resolved? Answer: Phallic, identification with same sex parent Name that defense mechanism: The defense mechanism that underlies all the rest. repression Acting the opposite of how you feel - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Founders Review

Founders Review1. According to Freud, what is the third psychosexual stage (age 3-6)? How is it resolved?

Answer: Phallic, identification with same sex parent

2. Name that defense mechanism:- The defense mechanism that underlies all the rest.

- repression- Acting the opposite of how you feel

- Reaction formation- Addressing problem from an emotionless perspective

- intellectualization- Redirecting feelings to a less-threatening object

- displacement- Accusing others of unacceptable desire you are having.

- Projection

3. Name that person:- Neo-Freudian that created birth order theories and focused on feelings of inferiority

(Adler)- founder of trait theory

(Allport)- father of psychoanalysis.

(Freud)- first to suggest introversion and extraversion as underlying personality traits

(Jung)- proposed theories of basic anxiety and womb envy as determinants of personality

(Horney)- proposed theory of collective unconscious

(Jung)

Page 2: Founders Review

Assessing Personality Review4. Rorschach, TAT, Draw-a-person are all examples of this type of test.

- Projective tests5. Name 3 personality inventories that align with the trait perspective.

- MMPI, Myers-Briggs, NEO-FFI, 16PF, BFI6. Which is the most commonly used, empirically-derived personality

inventory?- MMPI

7. According to the trait perspective, what determines our personality?- Genes, biology

8. According to psychoanalysis, what determines our personality?- The unconscious; how we mediate unconscious desires and societal expectations; how we coped with unconscious sexual desires as a child (with the help of our primary caregiver)

Page 3: Founders Review

Humanistic Psychology• Late 1950s-early 1960’s

– “make love, not war” era beginning.

– Doesn’t jive with:•Psychoanalysis: too pessimistic•Behavioralism: too deterministic•Trait: too objective

• Along came psychologists wanted to focus on “healthy” people and how to help them strive to “be all that they can be”.

Page 4: Founders Review

Abraham MaslowStudied healthy, creative people (not mentally ill)

Found in them a desire to self-actualize (fulfill their potential).

Self-actualizing people are: self aware, caring, open, spontaneous, loving, secure, problem-centered, have a few deep relationships, moved by peak experiences

Peak experience= sudden feelings of intense happiness and well-being, and possibly the awareness of "ultimate truth" and the unity of all things.

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Who did Maslow study?

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Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Deficiency needs (bottom four levels): Needs that are salient only when deficient.

Being need (self-actualization): a need that is always salient.

According to Maslow, only 2-3% of people are truly self-actualizing.

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Page 8: Founders Review

Neurosis

If you have significant difficulty fulfilling a need at some point in your life you may “fixate” at that level and develop neuroses.

Meredith Gray was abandoned by her father and raised by an emotionally cold mother, causing her to fixate at the belongingness stage. Now, she has difficulty accepting love from others.

Page 9: Founders Review

Carl Rogers’s Person-Centered Perspective

• People are basically GOOD.

•We are like acorns; we need a nurturing environment to grow.

Acorns need water, sun, and air to grow.We need genuineness, acceptance and empathy to grow.

Page 10: Founders Review

Genuineness

• Being open with your own feelings.

•Dropping your facade.

•Being transparent and self-disclosing.

Page 11: Founders Review

Acceptance

• Unconditional Positive Regard:

An attitude of acceptance regardless of circumstances.

Accepting yourself or others completely.

Page 12: Founders Review

Empathy

• Listening, sharing, understanding and mirroring feelings and reflecting their meanings.

Page 13: Founders Review

Self-Concept• Both Rogers and Maslow believed that

your self-concept is at the center of your personality.

•If our self concept is positive….

We tend to act and perceive the world positively.

•If our self-concept is negative….We fall short of our “ideal self” and feel dissatisfied and unhappy

Page 14: Founders Review

Conditioned Positive Regard (CPR)

- “I like you if….”

- Causes us to focus on what others think we should be “ideal self”

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... And lose touch with what WE want to be “real self”

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The discrepancy causes…

• Neurosis– “I’m not good

enough”– “No one likes me for

who I am”– “I have to pretend to

be someone else”

The way to cure neurosis is…

Page 17: Founders Review

…Unconditioned Positive Regard (UPR)

Page 18: Founders Review

Assessing the Personality

• Questionnaire to describe who you are and who you want to be.

• Goal of therapy is to bring the two together.• How????

Real self Ideal self

Page 19: Founders Review

Client-centered therapy

• Developed by Carl Rogers

• Therapist offers UPR (genuineness, acceptance, and empathy).

• Active listening• Non-directive• Patient gets in touch

with “real self” and is happy.

Page 20: Founders Review

Is there evidence for humanism?Some. Self-knowledge helps: Research shows that we perform better if we take time to set clear goals for ourselves.

Correlational studies show that people who feel good about themselves have fewer sleepless nights, resist pressure to conform, are less likely to use drugs, are more persistent at difficult tasks, are less shy and lonely, and are happier.(does high self-esteem causes these or is it the other way around?)

Experimental research has shown that low-self esteem can CAUSE people to act thin-skinned, judgmental, more prejudiced, and excessively critical.

Page 21: Founders Review

Do minorities have lower self-esteem?

NOT REALLY

They value the areas in which they excel.

They attribute problems to prejudice.

They compare themselves to their own group.

Page 22: Founders Review

Self-Serving Bias• A readiness to

perceive oneself favorable.

•People accept more responsibility for successes than failures.

•Appears to be adaptive as it wards off extreme depression.

Page 23: Founders Review

Does culture play a part in our personality (according to humanistic

psychologists)?• Individualism: giving priority to one’s own goals

over group goals. Defining your identity in terms of yourself.– More privacy, more accepting of different lifestyles,

people feel free to switch jobs, churches, and homes.

• Collectivism: giving priority to the goals of a group and defining your identity as part of that group.– Less divorce, homicide, stress-related disease, and

loneliness

Page 24: Founders Review

Criticisms of Humanism

• Concepts are vague and subjective

• Can lead to self-indulgence, selfishness, and erosion of morals

• Fails to appreciate the human capacity for evil.