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Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud
 Born in 1856
 Spent his life working in Vienna but left in
1938 after the Nazi takeover
 Died in 1939 in London
 Originally trained as a doctor – was
influenced by Joseph Breuer who was using
hypnosis to treat ‘hysterical reactions’ in
female patients
2
Freud’s consulting room
Psychodynamic Approach
The key
assumption of the
psychodynamic
approach is that all
human behaviour
can be explained in
terms of inner
conflict of the mind.
The Mind
The conscious. The
small amount of mental
activity we know about.
The preconscious.
Things we could be
aware of if we wanted
or tried.
The unconscious.
Things we are unaware
of and can not become
aware of.
Thoughts
Perceptions
Memories
Stored knowledge
Fears
Unacceptable desires
Violent motives
Irrational wishes
Immoral urges
Selfish needs
Shameful experiences
Traumatic experiences
Bad
Worse
Really Bad
Freud (1856-1939)
Theory of Personality
ID = Latin for ‘it’
The Mind
Id:
Instincts
Superego:
Morality
Ego:
Reality
The Mind
 This diagram is
often used to
represent Freud’s
view of the mind
and personality.
 According to Freud,
the id is the
personality construct
that we are born
with.
 Its energy is called
the “libido”.
 It operates on the
pleasure principle.
 What does this
mean?
 How will the id inform
behaviour?
The Id Need food...
need drink...
need comfort...
need burping...
need sleep...
need it NOW!
 The superego is the 'ideal'
force, the civilised, socially
acceptable figure the
person strives to be.
 It includes our
understanding of right and
wrong.
 It opposes the id and is
essentially an
internalisation of rules
passed down from our
parents.
The Superego
 The ego is the reality
principle.
 It must balance the
drives of the id and the
control of the
superego.
The ego
 The strength of each
individual force is a
factor in personality –
 If a person's superego
is too strong, they are
seen as rigid, anxious
or self righteous.
 If a person's id is too
strong, they are seen
as delinquent,
antisocial or self
centred.
A balancing act
Personality Development
 Freud believed that the id, ego and
super ego were separate and conflicting
forces,
 They need to be balanced for good
mental health and normal behaviour
EGO
ID SUPEREGO
There is one cake left on the
table.
 ID – want the cake, needs to take the cake,
isn't concerned about others.
 SUPEREGO – I mustn’t have the cake, I
should leave it for someone else, I will let
someone else have it, don’t be greedy.
 EGO – I will wait for a few minutes, see if
anyone else has it, I am rather hungry, if it is
still there in 5 minutes then I’ll take it.
Development of the ID, EGO and
SUPEREGO
 At birth, personality is ruled by ID (pleasure
principle)
 Early childhood, EGO starts to develop
(reality principle)
 Later childhood, the SUPER EGO emerges
(Morality principle)
Healthy Psyche
Id Superego
Ego
OK Guys – I’m in charge.
Anything you want has to go
through me.
OK.
OK.
Neurotic Psyche
Id
Superego
Ego
Listen up! I’m in charge, and you are not
here to enjoy yourselves. Get ready for a
double-size portion of anxiety with a side
order of guilt!
No fun.
>whimper<
Psychotic Psyche
Id
SuperegoEgo
Sex! Food! Drink! Drugs!
NOW!
Who
turned out
the lights?
Link to abnormality
 Ego too weak – allows id and superego to
dominate,
 Id too strong – selfish, out of control, could
become psychopathic- destructive
tendencies & uninhibited sexual behaviour
 Superego too strong – strict, anxious,
obsessive – depression, anxiety, OCD
What happens if there is a conflict
between the id, ego & superego?
 ANXIETY
 The ego tries to avoid anxiety & uses ego
defence mechanisms to maintain a
balance in relation to the id & superego
21
Proof of the unconscious?
 ‘Freudian slips’
 “A Freudian slip is saying
one thing and meaning
your mother”
 http://www.youtube.com/w
atch?v=Mvxe04wGmTw&f
eature=related
Ego Defence Mechanisms
 The constant conflict of between Id, Ego
and Superego produces anxiety. To
manage this anxiety, the ego has defence
mechanisms;
1. Denial
2. Projection
3. Displacement
4. Repression
 Displacement: you redirect your feelings to
another target
It’s not my fault my marriage
is over. It’s the newspapers’.
And those women for selling
their stories… And Cheryl’s
for not being there enough…
And my mum’s for not
breastfeeding me. I hate
them all!
Other Defence Mechanisms
 Regression – regressing back to earlier
childhood behaviour
– e.g. a child anxious mother will reject him once
new baby bro/sis arrives can revert to tantrums,
bed wetting, soiling etc
 Reaction Formation – hiding real feelings by
acting in the opposite way
– e.g. talking loudly when nervous
‘m Regression: You revert to an old, usually
immature, behaviour
I’m going home to me Mam,
so she can cook me beans on
toast, and stroke me hair
and tell me that everything
is going to be alright.
 Rationalisation: You try to justify
uncomfortable thoughts or feelings with
socially acceptable motives
I don’t hate women… I
love them… that’s why I
can’t keep it in my
pants!
Defence Mechanisms
can lead to Mental Disorder
 unacceptable desires and impulses, traumatic
events, etc ‘managed’ by defence mechanisms
can;
– re-emerge as symptoms of anxiety or other emotional
disorders.
– Still affect behaviour, leading to distress as person
doesn’t understand why they’re behaving as they are
– Be triggered by similar life event, leading them to re-
experience original event leading to depression.
33
Psychodynamic Approach
Main Assumption
 The Psychodynamic Model assumes that
experiences in our earlier years can affect our
emotions, attitudes and behaviour in later years
without us being aware that it is happening. Freud
suggested that abnormal behaviour is caused by
unresolved conflicts in the Unconscious. These
conflicts create anxiety, and we use defence
mechanisms such as repression and denial to
protect our Ego against this anxiety.
Freud’s psychosexual
development theory
 Another key element in Freud’s psychoanalytic
theory of normal/abnormal behaviour
 A child goes through a series of stages & the id
looks for gratification in different bodily areas
(erogenous zones)
 If a child is deprived or over-gratified at a particular
stage they may become fixated which will affect
their adult behaviour
34
Psychosexual Development
1. Oral
2. Anal
3. Phallic
4. Latency
5. Genital
• ‘Old Age Pensioners Love Guinness’
The FIVE psychosexual stages
 The Oral (Birth - 1 year)
 The Anal (1 - 3 years)
 The Phallic (3 - 5/6 years)
 The Latency (6 - puberty)
 The Genital (adulthood)
Stage 1 - the ORAL stage
 Mouth (sucking) is the source of pleasure
 The ID is in control
 Successful completion of this stage is
demonstrated by weaning – eating
independently
In the ORAL stage …….
 Fixation caused by
 Oral receptive (not allowed to suck
freely) – passive, needy, sensitive to
rejection – overeats and drinks, bite
nails, may smoke
 Oral aggressive (allowed to suck too
often/too long) – hostile and verbally
abusive, sarcastic
Stage 2 - the ANAL Stage
 Elimination of faeces is the source
of pleasure
 18 months to 3 years
 Defecation is main source of
pleasure
 Successful completion marked by
potty training
In the ANAL stage ….
 Fixation (a) Anal expulsive:
symptoms: giving to charity, potters, gardeners,
(sublimating the wish to smear), disorganised.
 Fixation (b) Anal retentive
symptoms: miserly, thrifty, orderly, obstinate, tidy,
stubborn, obsessive.
Stage 3 : The PHALLIC stage
 The Superego develops
 The Oedipus conflict (boys)
 The Electra conflict (girls)
The latency stage
 Age 6 to puberty approximately
 Sexual urges sublimated into sports and
other hobbies
 Focus on developing same sex friendships
 No particular requirements for successful
completion
 Lull before the storm of puberty!
The genital stage
 Puberty into adulthood
 Focus on genitals but not to
same extent as phallic stage
 Task is to develop healthy
adult relationships
 This should happen if earlier
stages have been negotiated
successfully
Little Hans
 Freud believed that the case
study of Little Hans supported
his theory of psychosexual
stages and the Oedipus complex
in particular
 http://goanimate.com/movie/0Ott
U_subTrM/1
Your task :
 Using your text book write three evaluation
points of the psychodynamic approach to
abnormal behaviour
45
Strengths
 One strength of the Psychodynamic Model is that
it reminds us that experiences in childhood can
affect us throughout our lives.
 It accepts that everybody can suffer mental
conflicts and neuroses through no fault of their
own.
 The model also suggests there is no need for
medical intervention such as drugs, ECT or
psychotherapy, and that the patient, with the help
of a psychoanalyst, can find a cure which
empowers the individual & discourages
helplessness)
 Practical applications: huge
impact on the world of
counselling, psychotherapy and
psychiatry.
 Face validity.
 It treats the whole person, the
cause, not just the symptoms.
 Recognises the importance of
childhood.
Strengths of the Psychodynamic
Perspective
Weaknesses
 The main limitation of the Psychodynamic Model is that it cannot be
scientifically observed or tested. Abstract concepts.
 Any evidence recovered from a patient must be analysed and
interpreted by a therapist. This leaves open the possibility of serious
misinterpretation or bias because two therapists may interpret the
same evidence in entirely different ways.
 Psychoanalysis is time-consuming and expensive. It may not even
work: in a comprehensive view of 7000 cases, Eysenck (1952) claimed
that psychodynamic therapy does more harm than good.
 Sexist – unbalanced, Electra Complex for example not thorough /
vague in detail. Reflective of Cultural bias of the time Freud worked
(women were not considered as equal to men)
 The case study method is
unrepresentative and therefore
there are concerns about
generalisability
 Criticised for too much emphasis
on SEX.
Weaknesses of the Psychodynamic
Perspective

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The Psychodynamic Approach 2015/16

  • 2. Sigmund Freud  Born in 1856  Spent his life working in Vienna but left in 1938 after the Nazi takeover  Died in 1939 in London  Originally trained as a doctor – was influenced by Joseph Breuer who was using hypnosis to treat ‘hysterical reactions’ in female patients 2
  • 4. Psychodynamic Approach The key assumption of the psychodynamic approach is that all human behaviour can be explained in terms of inner conflict of the mind.
  • 5. The Mind The conscious. The small amount of mental activity we know about. The preconscious. Things we could be aware of if we wanted or tried. The unconscious. Things we are unaware of and can not become aware of. Thoughts Perceptions Memories Stored knowledge Fears Unacceptable desires Violent motives Irrational wishes Immoral urges Selfish needs Shameful experiences Traumatic experiences Bad Worse Really Bad
  • 6. Freud (1856-1939) Theory of Personality ID = Latin for ‘it’
  • 8. The Mind  This diagram is often used to represent Freud’s view of the mind and personality.
  • 9.  According to Freud, the id is the personality construct that we are born with.  Its energy is called the “libido”.  It operates on the pleasure principle.  What does this mean?  How will the id inform behaviour? The Id Need food... need drink... need comfort... need burping... need sleep... need it NOW!
  • 10.  The superego is the 'ideal' force, the civilised, socially acceptable figure the person strives to be.  It includes our understanding of right and wrong.  It opposes the id and is essentially an internalisation of rules passed down from our parents. The Superego
  • 11.  The ego is the reality principle.  It must balance the drives of the id and the control of the superego. The ego
  • 12.  The strength of each individual force is a factor in personality –  If a person's superego is too strong, they are seen as rigid, anxious or self righteous.  If a person's id is too strong, they are seen as delinquent, antisocial or self centred. A balancing act
  • 13. Personality Development  Freud believed that the id, ego and super ego were separate and conflicting forces,  They need to be balanced for good mental health and normal behaviour
  • 15. There is one cake left on the table.  ID – want the cake, needs to take the cake, isn't concerned about others.  SUPEREGO – I mustn’t have the cake, I should leave it for someone else, I will let someone else have it, don’t be greedy.  EGO – I will wait for a few minutes, see if anyone else has it, I am rather hungry, if it is still there in 5 minutes then I’ll take it.
  • 16. Development of the ID, EGO and SUPEREGO  At birth, personality is ruled by ID (pleasure principle)  Early childhood, EGO starts to develop (reality principle)  Later childhood, the SUPER EGO emerges (Morality principle)
  • 17. Healthy Psyche Id Superego Ego OK Guys – I’m in charge. Anything you want has to go through me. OK. OK.
  • 18. Neurotic Psyche Id Superego Ego Listen up! I’m in charge, and you are not here to enjoy yourselves. Get ready for a double-size portion of anxiety with a side order of guilt! No fun. >whimper<
  • 19. Psychotic Psyche Id SuperegoEgo Sex! Food! Drink! Drugs! NOW! Who turned out the lights?
  • 20. Link to abnormality  Ego too weak – allows id and superego to dominate,  Id too strong – selfish, out of control, could become psychopathic- destructive tendencies & uninhibited sexual behaviour  Superego too strong – strict, anxious, obsessive – depression, anxiety, OCD
  • 21. What happens if there is a conflict between the id, ego & superego?  ANXIETY  The ego tries to avoid anxiety & uses ego defence mechanisms to maintain a balance in relation to the id & superego 21
  • 22. Proof of the unconscious?  ‘Freudian slips’  “A Freudian slip is saying one thing and meaning your mother”  http://www.youtube.com/w atch?v=Mvxe04wGmTw&f eature=related
  • 23. Ego Defence Mechanisms  The constant conflict of between Id, Ego and Superego produces anxiety. To manage this anxiety, the ego has defence mechanisms; 1. Denial 2. Projection 3. Displacement 4. Repression
  • 24.  Displacement: you redirect your feelings to another target It’s not my fault my marriage is over. It’s the newspapers’. And those women for selling their stories… And Cheryl’s for not being there enough… And my mum’s for not breastfeeding me. I hate them all!
  • 25. Other Defence Mechanisms  Regression – regressing back to earlier childhood behaviour – e.g. a child anxious mother will reject him once new baby bro/sis arrives can revert to tantrums, bed wetting, soiling etc  Reaction Formation – hiding real feelings by acting in the opposite way – e.g. talking loudly when nervous
  • 26. ‘m Regression: You revert to an old, usually immature, behaviour I’m going home to me Mam, so she can cook me beans on toast, and stroke me hair and tell me that everything is going to be alright.
  • 27.  Rationalisation: You try to justify uncomfortable thoughts or feelings with socially acceptable motives I don’t hate women… I love them… that’s why I can’t keep it in my pants!
  • 28. Defence Mechanisms can lead to Mental Disorder  unacceptable desires and impulses, traumatic events, etc ‘managed’ by defence mechanisms can; – re-emerge as symptoms of anxiety or other emotional disorders. – Still affect behaviour, leading to distress as person doesn’t understand why they’re behaving as they are – Be triggered by similar life event, leading them to re- experience original event leading to depression.
  • 29. 33 Psychodynamic Approach Main Assumption  The Psychodynamic Model assumes that experiences in our earlier years can affect our emotions, attitudes and behaviour in later years without us being aware that it is happening. Freud suggested that abnormal behaviour is caused by unresolved conflicts in the Unconscious. These conflicts create anxiety, and we use defence mechanisms such as repression and denial to protect our Ego against this anxiety.
  • 30. Freud’s psychosexual development theory  Another key element in Freud’s psychoanalytic theory of normal/abnormal behaviour  A child goes through a series of stages & the id looks for gratification in different bodily areas (erogenous zones)  If a child is deprived or over-gratified at a particular stage they may become fixated which will affect their adult behaviour 34
  • 31. Psychosexual Development 1. Oral 2. Anal 3. Phallic 4. Latency 5. Genital • ‘Old Age Pensioners Love Guinness’
  • 32. The FIVE psychosexual stages  The Oral (Birth - 1 year)  The Anal (1 - 3 years)  The Phallic (3 - 5/6 years)  The Latency (6 - puberty)  The Genital (adulthood)
  • 33. Stage 1 - the ORAL stage  Mouth (sucking) is the source of pleasure  The ID is in control  Successful completion of this stage is demonstrated by weaning – eating independently
  • 34. In the ORAL stage …….  Fixation caused by  Oral receptive (not allowed to suck freely) – passive, needy, sensitive to rejection – overeats and drinks, bite nails, may smoke  Oral aggressive (allowed to suck too often/too long) – hostile and verbally abusive, sarcastic
  • 35. Stage 2 - the ANAL Stage  Elimination of faeces is the source of pleasure  18 months to 3 years  Defecation is main source of pleasure  Successful completion marked by potty training
  • 36. In the ANAL stage ….  Fixation (a) Anal expulsive: symptoms: giving to charity, potters, gardeners, (sublimating the wish to smear), disorganised.  Fixation (b) Anal retentive symptoms: miserly, thrifty, orderly, obstinate, tidy, stubborn, obsessive.
  • 37. Stage 3 : The PHALLIC stage  The Superego develops  The Oedipus conflict (boys)  The Electra conflict (girls)
  • 38. The latency stage  Age 6 to puberty approximately  Sexual urges sublimated into sports and other hobbies  Focus on developing same sex friendships  No particular requirements for successful completion  Lull before the storm of puberty!
  • 39. The genital stage  Puberty into adulthood  Focus on genitals but not to same extent as phallic stage  Task is to develop healthy adult relationships  This should happen if earlier stages have been negotiated successfully
  • 40. Little Hans  Freud believed that the case study of Little Hans supported his theory of psychosexual stages and the Oedipus complex in particular  http://goanimate.com/movie/0Ott U_subTrM/1
  • 41. Your task :  Using your text book write three evaluation points of the psychodynamic approach to abnormal behaviour 45
  • 42. Strengths  One strength of the Psychodynamic Model is that it reminds us that experiences in childhood can affect us throughout our lives.  It accepts that everybody can suffer mental conflicts and neuroses through no fault of their own.  The model also suggests there is no need for medical intervention such as drugs, ECT or psychotherapy, and that the patient, with the help of a psychoanalyst, can find a cure which empowers the individual & discourages helplessness)
  • 43.  Practical applications: huge impact on the world of counselling, psychotherapy and psychiatry.  Face validity.  It treats the whole person, the cause, not just the symptoms.  Recognises the importance of childhood. Strengths of the Psychodynamic Perspective
  • 44. Weaknesses  The main limitation of the Psychodynamic Model is that it cannot be scientifically observed or tested. Abstract concepts.  Any evidence recovered from a patient must be analysed and interpreted by a therapist. This leaves open the possibility of serious misinterpretation or bias because two therapists may interpret the same evidence in entirely different ways.  Psychoanalysis is time-consuming and expensive. It may not even work: in a comprehensive view of 7000 cases, Eysenck (1952) claimed that psychodynamic therapy does more harm than good.  Sexist – unbalanced, Electra Complex for example not thorough / vague in detail. Reflective of Cultural bias of the time Freud worked (women were not considered as equal to men)
  • 45.  The case study method is unrepresentative and therefore there are concerns about generalisability  Criticised for too much emphasis on SEX. Weaknesses of the Psychodynamic Perspective