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The Psychology of the Person Chapter 5 Neo-Freudians

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Title: The Psychology of the Person Chapter 5 Neo-Freudians


1
The Psychology of the PersonChapter 5
Neo-Freudians
  • Naomi Wagner, Ph.D
  • Lecture Outlines
  • Based on Burger, 8th edition

2
Background for the Emergence of the Neo-Freudians
  • Many scholars who gathered around Freud in Vienna
    eventually broke away from the Vienna group to
    develop their own theories of personality and
    establish their own schools of psychology.
  • Collectively, these theorists are known as the
    neo- Freudians because they retained many basic
    Freudian concepts and assumptions.

3
Limitations of Freudian Theory According to the
Neo-Freudians
  • Among the limits they saw in Freud's theory
    were
  • His failure to recognize personality change
    after the first few years of life
  • His emphasis on instinctual over social
    influences
  • The generally negative picture he painted of
    human nature.

4
(Cont-d)
  • They differed from Freud along some aspects of
    his theory
  • Freud put emphasis on early childhood and on
    instinctual drives, without considering social
    factors.
  • The neo-Freudians also objected to the overall
    pessimistic tone of Freud, and his views of
    female inferiority.

5
Alfred Adler and Individual Psychology
  • Adler was an eye-doctor, who was a weak and sick
    child
  • His autobiography is important for the
    understanding of his ideas
  • Alfred Adler introduced the concept of striving
    for superiority to account for most human
    motivation.
  • It is the ONLY motivation in life

6
Superiority and Inferiority
  • Adler argued that we are motivated to overcome
    feelings of helplessness that are rooted in the
    infants dependence on others
  • The striving for superiority is not expressed a
    an egotistic sense of grandiosity, but rather in
    Social Interest
  • Meaning- working to benefit others

7
Parental Behavior and Birth order
  • Adler also identified parental pampering and
    neglect as two sources of later personality
    problems.
  • He argued that middle born children were the
    most achieving and were less likely to experience
    psychological disorders than were first-born or
    last-born.

8
Birth Order
  • Advantages Adler saw in the middle child

9
Carl Jung and Analytical Psychology
  • Carl Jung proposed the existence of a collective
    unconscious that houses primordial images he
    called archetypes.
  • The collective unconscious contains material
    each of us inherited from past generations and is
    basically the same for all people.
  • Evidence for the collective unconscious was in
    ethnic myths, religions, dreams

10
Archetypes
  • Jung used the terms Archetypes or Primordial
    Images to refer to the collective unconscious
    materials.
  • Most important of the archetypes are the anima,
    the animus, and the shadow. Jung pointed to the
    recurrent surfacing of archetypal symbols in
    folklore, art, dreams, and psychotic patients as
    evidence for their existence.

11
Symbol (?)
12
Erik Erikson and Ego Psychology
  • Role of ego To establish and maintain a sense of
    identity
  • Development across the lifespan Erikson divided
    the lifespan into 8 phases
  • Each phase had a developmental task to
    accomplish, which Erikson called crisis
  • The crisis can be resolved either positively or
    negatively, affecting further development

13
The Eight Phases of DevelopmentInfancy Trust
vs. mistrust
  • Child depends on the responsiveness of the
    caregivers

14
Toddler Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
  • Allowing the child to explore provides a sense
    of mastery over the environment

15
Early Childhood Initiative vs. Guilt
  • Learn how to interact with others, seek out
    playmates and resolve conflicts

16
Karen Horney and Feminine Psychology
  • Karen Horney rejected Freud's emphasis on
    instinctual causes of personality development.
  • She argued that the differences Freud saw between
    the personalities of men and women were more
    likely the result of social factors than
    inherited predispositions.
  • Horney maintained that neurotic behavior is the
    result of interpersonal styles developed in
    childhood to overcome anxiety. She identified
    three neurotic styles, which she called moving
    toward people, moving against people, and moving
    away from people

17
Elementary School Industry vs. Inferiority
  • Social comparison with classmates may evoke a
    sense of competence or faliure

18
Adolescence Identity vs. Role Confusion
  • Time of experimentation

19
Young Adulthood Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • Developing intimate relationship

20
Middle Adulthood Generativity vs. Stagnation
  • Guiding the next generation or involving in
    self-idulgence

21
Older Age Ego Integrity vs. Despair
  • Reflection on past experience creates a sense of
    integrity and acceptance

22
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23
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
  • . Among the personality assessment instruments to
    come out of the neo- Freudian theories is the
    Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
  • This test measures psychological types, as
    outlined by Jung.
  • Test scores divide people into types along four
    dimensions extraversion-introversion,
    sensing-intuitive, thinking-feeling, and
    judgment-perception. Researchers have challenged
    the way the test divides people into categories.

24
Current Status of the Neo-Freudians
  • The Neo-Freudians are mentioned today primarily
    because of their historical relevance
  • Among the strengths of the neo-Freudian theories
    are the contributions they made to psychoanalytic
    theory.
  • Many later approaches to personality were no
    doubt influenced by one or more of these
    theorists.
  • Criticisms of the neo- Freudians include their
    use of biased and questionable data to support
    the theories. In addition, critics have charged
    that some of the theories are oversimplified and
    incomplete.
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