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Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches: Historical

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Title: Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches: Historical


1
2 22 07
  • Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • 1. Freud and some of his theory
  • 2. Influenced by Freudian theory

2
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Freud
  • Founder of psychoanalytic school
  • Spent most of life in Vienna

3
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Freuds early career
  • Studied hypnosis with Charcot in France
  • First book the Interpretation of Dreams 1900
  • Could use analysis of dreams to probe the
    unconscious

4
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • By 1902
  • A regular group of psychoanalytic supporters
  • By 1908
  • A much larger group
  • In 1909
  • In 1910

5
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • How Freud died
  • Unsuccessful surgeries
  • Died at 82

6
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Later in life
  • Germany invaded Austria 1938
  • Freud, wife, 6 children
  • Feared for safety
  • Moved to London
  • Freud died a year later

7
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Psychic energy
  • Either healthy
  • Or unhealthy
  • Treatment
  • Energy channeled in appropriate, healthy
    directions

8
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • What are well-springs of psychic energy?
  • Initial framework
  • Survival instinct (like Darwins natural
    selection)
  • Sexual instinct (like Darwins sexual selection)

9
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • What are well-springs of psychic energy?
  • Thanatos
  • Influenced by war-like nature of Germans during
    WW1 WW2

10
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • A broader conception by Freud
  • Anything
  • Need-satisfying
  • Life-sustaining
  • Pleasure-oriented
  • Instinct, needs to destroy, harm, aggress

11
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Perhaps consistent with his early attempts to
    create, both in career and family
  • Perhaps consistent with his cancer, impending
    death, world wars

12
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Eating sustaining oneself, killing another
  • Sadism in sexual realms
  • To hurt is to feel pleasure

13
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Freuds architecture of mind
  • (1) id
  • Wants immediate gratification
  • Of all wishes
  • Primary process thinking
  • Associative, without logic
  • E.g., in dreams, when id dominates

14
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Freuds architecture of mind
  • (2)
  • Behavior in manner
  • Consistent with society
  • Attempts to satisfy wishes in socially acceptable
    terms
  • Secondary process thinking
  • Logical, rational

15
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches Historical
  • Freuds architecture of mind
  • (3) superego
  • Can be unrealistic in moral standards
  • Can punish self for perceived faults
  • Thought to be primarily unconscious

16
Ch 9 Psychoanalytic Approaches
  • Influenced by Freud
  • 1. Homophobia as repressed sexual desire
  • 2. Terror Management death and defense
  • 3. Baumeister The Id and Ego often work at
    cross-purposes

17
Fear of Homosexuals
  • Many (men especially) are homophobic
  • Verbal abuse, threats
  • I would feel nervous around homosexuals

18
Fear of Homosexuals
  • What is homophobia?
  • Not just negative attitudes

19
Fear of Homosexuals
  • What is the real threat here?
  • Could it be repressed homosexual desires in self?

20
Fear of Homosexuals
  • All male subjects
  • All avowed heterosexuals
  • Homophobia scale
  • I would feel nervous being around homosexuals
  • Low homophobics vs. high homophobics

21
Fear of Homosexuals
  • Heterosexual
  • Homosexual female
  • Homosexual male
  • Undressing, foreplay, oral sex, intercourse

22
Fear of Homosexuals
  • Adams et al. (1996)
  • Can we ask people?
  • No, unconscious

23
Fear of Homosexuals
  • Adams et al. (1996)
  • penile plethysmography
  • H high homophobics will show tumescence response
    to male homosexual porno

24
Fear of Homosexuals
Low homophobia
High homophobia
Tumescence response
Time
25
Fear of Homosexuals
High homophobia
Tumescence response
Low homophobia
Time
26
Fear of Homosexuals
Tumescence response
High homophobia
Low homophobia
Time
27
Fear of homosexuals
  • What about subjective arousal?
  • Subjective arousal (this turns me on)
  • Penile size
  • The one case where penile gt subjective
  • Homophobics viewing homosexual porno

28
Fear of homosexuals
  • Adams et al. (1996)
  • Id
  • Such desires unacceptable to person
  • Especially when good change of leaking out
  • Like when around homosexuals
  • Therefore, avoid homosexuals

29
Terror Management
  • - born into this world alone will die alone
  • - this knowledge is reality
  • - the only thing that is known for certain
  • - how often are we aware of imminent death?
  • - not often
  • - could this be because we block such thoughts
    from awareness?
  • - they (P,S,G) think so

30
Terror Management
  • Fallible bodies that die
  • We know we die
  • No other creature does
  • Therefore, we dont
  • We entertain, distract ourselves
  • Culture as a way of distracting self from terror
    of death

31
Terror Management(from Solomon et al., 2000)
  • It is awesome to be alive and know it, and
    dreadful to recognize that death is ones
    inevitable fate as an ambulatory assemblage of
    blood, tissue, and guts, inherently no more
    significant or enduring than a barnacle, a
    beetle, or a bell pepper.
  • - what is a body?
  • - a vessicle for guts fluid
  • - mushy stuff that dies

32
Terror Management
  • - the burdens of self-consciousness
  • - knowledge of inevitable death
  • - need for transcendence, permanence
  • - how? 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • - all are crutches, defense against inevitable
    death

33
Terror Management(from Solomon et al., 2000)
  • Different groups, cultures
  • From this perspective, the ongoing ethnic strife
    pervading human history is in large part the
    result of humans inability to tolerate those
    with different death-denying visions of reality.

34
Solomon et al. (2000)
  • The World Leaders Project is an initiative aimed
    at understanding human behavior in order to
    promote world peace. The two men wrote a letter
    to every world leader on the planet requesting a
    meeting with the leaders, to discuss the
    psychology of the human attraction towards
    violence.

35
Solomon et al. (2000)
  • Guyana leader meeting
  • TM guys Did you know that politics is just fear
    of death?
  • GL Gosh no, thanks for wisdom. From now on, I
    hug my enemies

36
Terror Management
  • How does one show that certain behaviors
    (prejudice, belief in truth, culture) are
    motivated escape from death?

37
Terror Management(from Solomon et al., 2000)
  • - Americans took longer, and felt more
    uncomfortable (relative to a control group),
    solving a problem that required them to use the
    American flag to sift sand out of black dyeand
    bang a nail into the wall with a crucifix
  • - also more prejudice, aggression against
    outgroups (Jewish people, foreigners, etc.)

38
Mortality Salience
  • There are unacceptable thoughts we avoid, repress
  • Ego constructs defenses against them
  • E.g., belief in cultural world view
  • Must come to terms with such unacceptable
    thoughts
  • Not unconscious sexual desires
  • Rather unconscious fears of death
  • Many agree that Freud
  • Too obsessed by sex motivation

39
Freuds energy model
  • Freud Id
  • Lust, hate, sloth, short-term satisfaction
  • Lots of energy
  • Energy comes from instincts, drives
  • Without control, id-driven behavior is

40
Freuds energy model
  • Freud Ego
  • Channel id in accordance with long-term goals
  • Dont screw yourself by reckless, stupid,
    slothful behaviors
  • Size is small
  • Baumeister like a high level administrator with
    a very tight budget

41
Baumeister, Tice Ego Control
  • Id versus ego battles
  • (1) overriding bad habits (e.g., smoking)
  • (2) making choices (e.g., fajitas or combo 5)
  • (3) initiating action (e.g., starting paper)
  • (4) optimal performance (e.g., concentrating on
    test)
  • (5) affect regulation (e.g., trying to calm down
    when agitated)
  • (6) thought suppression (e.g., fighting off
    negative thoughts during test)
  • (7) impulse control (e.g., dieting)

42
Baumeister, Tice Ego Control
  • Everything that feels good is either illegal,
    immoral, or fattening
  • Impulse control issues
  • Substance abuse, addiction
  • Crime
  • Domestic violence
  • Teen pregnancy
  • Debt, bankruptcy
  • Sexually transmitted diseases
  • Smoking
  • Obesity
  • Under-achievement (e.g., bad grades)

43
Baumeister, Tice Ego Control
  • Everything that feels good is either illegal,
    immoral, or fattening
  • Affect control to feel good (pleasure
    principle)
  • Impulse control to pursue long-term goals
    (reality principle)
  • Like a fight between id and ego
  • Impulses need not have sexual or aggressive roots
    (e.g., eating fatty foods, procrastinating)
  • Impulses not unconscious, at least not
    fundamentally so
  • Being aware of impulses does not in itself
    provoke anxiety
  • Freud horrible urges you would rather not know
    about
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