Week 06: Chapters 10 and 11 Flashcards

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1
Q

ubiquitous

A

Found everywhere.

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2
Q

psychic determinism

A

The assumption that everything psychological has a cause that is, in principle, identifiable.

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3
Q

id

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the repository of the drives, the emotions, and the primitive, unconscious part of the mind that wants everything now.

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4
Q

ego

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the relatively rational part of the mind that balances the competing claims of the id, the superego, and reality.

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5
Q

superego

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the part of the mind that consists of the conscience and the individual’s system of internalized rules of conduct, or morality.

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6
Q

compromise formation

A

In modern psychoanalytic thought, the main job of the ego, which is to find a compromise among the different structures of the mind and the many different things the individual wants all at the same time. What the individual actually thinks and does is the result of this compromise.

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7
Q

libido

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the drive toward the creation, nurturing, and enhancement of life (including but not limited to sex), or the energy stemming from this drive; also called psychic energy.

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8
Q

Thanatos

A

In psychoanalytic theory, another term for the drive toward death, destruction, and decay.

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9
Q

doctrine of opposites

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the idea that everything implies or contains its opposite.

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10
Q

oral stage

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the stage of psychosexual development, from birth to about 18 months of age, during which the physical focus of the libido is located in the mouth, lips, and tongue.

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11
Q

anal stage

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the stage of psychosexual development, from about 18 months to 3 or 4 years of age, in which the physical focus of the libido is located in the anus and associated elimina- tive organs.

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12
Q

phaliic stage

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the stage of psychosexual development from about 4 to 7 years of age in which the physi- cal focus of the libido is the penis (for boys) and its lack (for girls).

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13
Q

identification

A

In psychoanalytic theory, tak- ing on the values and worldview of another person (e.g., a parent).

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14
Q

genital stage

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the final stage of psychosexual development, in which the physical focus of the libido is on the genitals, with an emphasis on het- erosexual relationships. The stage begins at about puberty, but is only fully attained when and if the individual achieves psychological maturity.

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15
Q

mental health

A

According to Freud’s definition, the ability to both love and work.

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16
Q

fixation

A

In psychoanalytic theory, leaving a disproportionate share of one’s libido behind at an earlier stage of development.

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17
Q

regression

A

In psychoanalytic theory, retreating to an earlier, more immature stage of psychosexual development, usually be- cause of stress but sometimes in the service of play and creativity.

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18
Q

secondary process thinking

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the term for rational and con-
scious processes of ordinary thought.

19
Q

primary process thinking

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the term for the strange and primitive style of unconscious thinking manifested by the id.

20
Q

condensation

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the method of primary process thinking in which several ideas are compressed into one.

21
Q

symbolization

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the process of primary process thinking

22
Q

conscious mind

A

That part of the mind’s activities of which one is aware.

23
Q

preconscious

A

Thoughts and ideas that temporarily reside just out of consciousness but which can be brought to mind quickly and easily.

24
Q

unconscious (mind)

A

Those areas and processes of the mind of which a person is not aware.

25
Q

parapraxis (plurial: parapraxes)

A

An unintentional utterance or action caused by a leakage from the uncon- scious parts of the mind; also called Freudian slip.

26
Q

defense mechanisms

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the mechanisms of the ego that serve to protect an individual from experiencing anxiety produced by conflicts with the id, superego, or reality.

27
Q

denial

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that allows the mind to deny that a current source of anxiety exists.

28
Q

repression

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that banishes the past from current awareness.

29
Q

reaction formation

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that keeps an anxiety-producing impulse or thought in
check by producing its opposite.

30
Q

projection

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism of attributing to somebody else a thought or impulse one fears in oneself.

31
Q

rationalization

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that produces a seemingly logical rationale for an impulse or thought that otherwise would cause anxiety.

32
Q

intellectualization

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism by which thoughts that otherwise would cause anxiety are translated into cool, analytic, nonarousing terms.

33
Q

displacement

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that redirects an impulse from a dangerous target to a safe one.

34
Q

sublimation

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that turns otherwise dangerous or anxiety-producing impulses toward constructive ends.

35
Q

transference

A

In psychoanalytic theory, the tendency to bring ways of thinking, feeling, and behavior that developed toward one important person into later relationships with different persons.

36
Q

neo-Freudian psychology

A

A general term for the psychoanalytically oriented work of many theorists and researchers who are in-fluenced by Freud’s theory.

37
Q

organ inferiority

A

In Adler’s version of psychoanalysis, the idea that people are motivated to succeed in adulthood in order to compensate for whatever they felt, in childhood, was their weakest aspect.

38
Q

masculine protest

A

In Adler’s version of psychoanalysis, the idea that a particular urge in adulthood is an attempt to compensate for one’s powerlessness felt in childhood.

39
Q

collective unconscious

A

In Jung’s version of psychoanalysis, the proposition that all people share certain unconscious ideas because of the history of the human species.

40
Q

archetypes

A

In Jung’s version of psychoanal- ysis, the fundamental images of people that are contained in the collective uncon- scious, including (among others) “the earth mother,” “the hero,” “the devil,” and “the supreme being.”

41
Q

persona

A

In Jung’s version of psychoanalysis, the social mask one wears in public dealings.

42
Q

anima

A

In Jung’s version of psychoanalysis, the idea of the typical female as held in the mind of a male.

43
Q

animus

A

In Jung’s version of psychoanalysis, the idea of the typical male as held in the mind of a female.

44
Q

attachment theory

A

A theoretical perspective that draws on psychoanalytic thought to describe the development and importance
of human attachments to emotionally significant other people.