psychodynamic approach

    Cards (19)

    • mind is made of 3 levels
      conscious- aware of
      preconscious- anything that could be made aware of
      subconscious- outside our awareness
    • structure of personality (iceberg)

      ID, ego, superego
      when a balance not achieved = abnormal behaviour occurs from over-developed superego
    • ID
      pleasure principle
      • present at birth
      • instincts
      • Basic drives towards sex and aggression
    • superego
      morality principle
    • ego
      reality principle
      • balances superego and id
    • 5 psychosexual stages
      at each stage conflict must be resolved before advancing to the next
      • resolution requires expenditure of sexual energy
    • fixation
      unresolved conflict
    • libido
      desire
    • oral (0-1)

      • babys libido focused on mouth
      • underfed = oral passive (pessimistic and envious)
      • overfed = oral aggressive (optimistic and full of admiration)
      • fixation = smoking, nail biting and excessive eating
    • Anal (1-3)

      • libido focuses on anus
      • pleasure from defecating controlling and restricting bowels
      • parents rules when potty training
      • too harsh = anal retentive (obsessive, tidy)
      • too lax = Anal expulsive (untidy, generosity)
    • phallic (3-6)

      • libido focuses on genitals
      • increasingly aware of bodies and genitals of opposite sex
      • anatomical sex differences
      • erotic attraction, rivalry, jealousy
      • oedipus complex = father as competition
      • electra complex = mother as competition
      • fixation = sexual anxiety, male attention approval, women want to dominate men
    • latency (6-12)

      • libido is dormant
      • impulses repressed
      • children focus on developing social and intellectual skills
      • fixation = insecure, hard to form healthy relationships, difficulty expressing emotion
    • genital (puberty onwards)

      • libido re-emerges
      • directed towards other sex
      • become sexually mature and explore feelings
      • form intimate relationships
      unresolved conflicts = sexual dysfunction, oral instead of intercourse
    • repression
      • unconscious blocking of unacceptable thoughts
      • these thoughts continue to influence behaviour without the individual being aware
      e.g phobia of spiders but can't remember why
    • denial
      • refusal to accept reality to avoid having to deal with any painful feelings associated with event
      • acts as if traumatic things not happened
      e.g alcoholic refuses to admit even though they've been arrested
    • displacement
      • redirecting thoughts and feelings (usually hostile)
      • person feels unable to express them in the presence of the person they should be directed towards
      e.g argument with gf so hit dog
    • evaluation: contribution via psychoanalysis
      • has practical application, psychoanalysis was the first attempt to treat mental disorder psychologically and not physically
      • helped clients to deal with everyday problems by providing access to the unconscious, employing techniques such as free association and dream analysis. suggests MH disorder linked to unresolved conflict
      • therefore, psychoanalysis is the frontrunner to modern day talking therapies e.g counselling, beneficial in improving lives of many
    • evaluation: idiographic
      • Many of Freud’s theories, most notably the Oedipus and Electra Complexes, were based on data from individual case studies and interviews.
      • The first issue, is that participants selected in case studies often have some kind of special psychological interest, so cannot represent the general population, so the findings lack ecological validity.
      • Secondly, mainly uses qualitative data, means that the researcher draws their own subjective conclusions. susceptible to researcher bias
      • Therefore, Freud’s theories suffer from limited applications and generalisability.
    • evaluation: gender bias
      • could be considered androcentric (male-centred) and guilty of imposing alpha bias, assuming there are fundamental differences between males and females
      • e.g. his theories of women and female sexuality were much less developed than his views on men, and that also due to electra being a weaker process that women are less moral than men
      • means that this approach cannot be used to explain the behaviours of females, and therefore the theory should be used with caution when explaining human behaviour
    See similar decks