Chapter 13Personality.ppt
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1、Chapter 13 Personality,Personality,Overview Personality is an elusive concept. Some psychologists have developed “grand theories” of personality. Others have tried to identify personality types and describe why an individual classified as a certain “personality type” behaves in certain ways. This ch
2、apter, we will examine the ways of understanding personality and also discuss the ways of and problems in measuring this concept.,Personality Theories: Whats behind the mask?,Personality - from the Latin word persona or “mask” that Greek actors used to wear to indicate if they were comic or tragic.
3、What is Personality? Your characteristic pattern of thinking/ feeling/ acting, esp. in social contexts. Implies some level of consistency across time and contexts This chapter Psychodynamic Approach Humanistic Approach Miscellaneous Facts & Assessment,FIGURE 13.1 Philosophers Thomas Hobbes and Jean-
4、Jacques Rousseau held opposing views of human nature. Psychologists Sigmund Freud and Carl Rogers also held conflicting views. Freud, like Hobbes, stressed the more negative aspects of human nature; Rogers, like Rousseau, the more positive aspects.,Two major approaches: psychodynamic & humanist,Psyc
5、hodynamic theories,Personality as the interplay of conflicting forces within the individual, including some forces that the individual may not consciously acknowledge.,Sigmund Frued,First psychodynamic personality theory Background Born 1856 Austro-Hungarian Empire Went into training as a medical do
6、ctor Theory based largely on sessions with his patients Nervous disorders sometimes didnt make neurological Sense and talking often revealed emotional problems and resolved symptoms Discussed cases with colleague Josef Breuer - who used hypnosis as a way to help cure patients with various neuroses (
7、e.g., Anna O),Sigmund Frued,1895 - announced a new technique called free association. Patients express any random thoughts that enter their minds. Unconscious thoughts and memories brought to the conscious, allowing the patient to understand them. This will hopefully free the patient from the proble
8、m. Free association led to a therapy known as psychoanalysis. Focused biologically based instinctual drives, especially sex and aggression. Very young children also have these drives and they influence fantasies, problem solving and social interactions,Personality,Freud and the psychodynamic approac
9、h Although Freuds theory had an enormous impact on society during the 20th century, his influence within psychology is waning. His theory is very difficult to test empirically. Although many psychologists find nothing useful in the Freudian paradigm, its tenets are still utilized by some mental heal
10、th practitioners.,Freuds view of the mind,conscious- what youre aware of, can verbalize and think about in a logical fashion. preconscious - ordinary memory. Not conscious, but can be easily brought into conscious. unconscious - not directly accessible. A dump box for urges, feelings and ideas that
11、are tied to anxiety, conflict and pain. These feelings and thoughts still exert influence on our actions and our conscious awareness.,Psychodynamic approach: Where does personality come from?,shaped by internal conflicting forces. individual may be unaware of these. conscious vs. the unconscious the
12、 unconscious =stuff in our minds that were not aware of. includes some memories, thoughts, & emotions that are illogical or socially unacceptable. often at odds with our conscious minds affects our behavior,Three Portions of Personality in Psychosexual Theory,Id-(unconscious)- sexual and aggressive
13、impulses - represents biological needs and desires, and requires immediate gratification Superego-(mainly unconscious) moral ethical principles - represents values of society and conscience; a primitive and unconscious sense of morality; it is the internalization of the world view and norms a child
14、absorbs from parents and peers. A primitive knowledge of right and wrong. Ego (mainly conscious) reality oriented functions develops in early infancy and is the conscious, rational part of personality It is the mediator between the id and the superego,The psychodynamic approach: How does a childs pe
15、rsonality develop?,Stages of Psychosexual DevelopmentAccording to Freud people have a libido (psychosexual energy) = all the sensations of excitement that arise from body stimulation.He believed that how we manage this aspect of our development influences nearly all aspects of our personality as we
16、grow up, we go through 5 psychosexual stages how we deal with the stages ultimately determines personality (“fixation”),Personality,Freuds psychosexual stages of development The Oral Stage (The first year of life) The infant derives intense psychosexual pleasure from stimulation of the mouth, partic
17、ularly from breastfeeding but from oral contact with other objects as well. Oral fixation might involve problems with eating, drinking, substance use, and issues of dependence on/independence from others.,Freuds psychosexual stages of development,The Anal Stage (About 1 to 3 years old) The child der
18、ives intense psychosexual pleasure from stimulation of the anal sphincter, the muscle that controls bowel movements. This is partly related to toilet training, which usually occurs at this stage. Anal fixation might involve problems with:. Anal retentive traits-being obsessively clean, overly tidy,
19、very orderly, controlled, punctual, stingy and possessive. due to strict attitudes towards toilet training. Anal expulsive traits- poorly organized and perhaps aggressive. Due to lax attitudes towards toilet training.,Freuds psychosexual stages of development,The Phallic Stage (About 3 to 6 years of
20、 age) The child derives intense psychosexual pleasure from stimulation of the genitals, and becomes attracted to the opposite-sex parent. Phallic fixation might involve fear of being castrated (in boys) or “penis envy” in girls.,Freuds psychosexual stages of development,The Latent Period (About 6 ye
21、ars to adolescence) The child in this period suppresses his or her psychosexual interest. Children in this age group tend to play mostly with same sex peers. There is some evidence that the “latent period” is a cultural artifact. Children in some non-industrialized societies do not experience a peri
22、od of “latency.”,Freuds psychosexual stages of development,The Genital Stage (Adolescence and beyond) The individual in this period has a strong sexual interest in other people. If he or she has completed the other stages successfully, primary psychosexual satisfaction will be gained from sexual int
23、ercourse. The individual who is fixated in an early period of development has little libido left for this stage.,Table 13.1 Freuds stages of psychosexual development.,Name that fixation!,Your friend Oscar cant seem to go more than 30 minutes without lighting up a cigarette. Freud would say that he,I
24、s fixated in the oral stage.,Name that fixation,Your friend Annie cant seem to hang on to a cent. She spends her money wildly. Her roommates are always threatening to call the health department because she never cleans up after herself and her room always looks like a “pigsty.” Freud would say that
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