chapter 12- exam 3 Flashcards

1
Q

neo-freudian psychology

A
  • theorists and researchers who were influenced by freud
  • less emphasis on and reinterpretation of the libido as a general motivation behind life and creativity
  • less emphasis on unconscious mental processes and more on conscious thought
  • less emphasis on instinctual drives and mental life as the source of psychological difficulties and more on interpersonal realtionships
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2
Q

ego psychology

A

less emphasis on unconscious mental processes and more on conscious thought

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3
Q

inferiority complex

A
  • alfred adler
  • social interest
  • organ inferiority
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4
Q

social interest

A

the desire to relate positively and productively with other people

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5
Q

organ inferiority

A

the ideas that individuals are motivated to attain equality with our superiority over other people to compensate for what they felt in childhood was their weakest aspect

  • masculine protest
  • helps explain universal needs for power and achievement
    * style of life
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6
Q

collective unconscious

A
  • carl jung

- memories and ideas that all humans share, most of which reside in the unconscious, in the form of basic image

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7
Q

archetypes and persona

A
  • core ideas of how people think about the world, both consciously and unconsciously
    * mother earth, hero, devil
    * appear in dreams, fantasies, mythology and modern literature
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8
Q

persona

A

the social mask one wears in public

  • everyone’s persona is false to some degree
    • shallowness could be a danger
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9
Q

anima and animus

A
  • masculine and feminine within us

- shape our responses to the opposite sex

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10
Q

Jung’s MBTI- ways of thinking

A
  • rational, feelings, sensing, and intuiting

- people vary in which way predominates but having a balance is best

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11
Q

Horney’s feminine psychology and basic anxiety

A
  • karen horney
  • disagreed with penis envy and women’s desire to be male
    * more due to lack of power/control in society
    * womb envy
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12
Q

basic anxiety

A
  • fear of being alone and helpless in a hostile world

- neurotic needs: needs that people feel but that are neither realistic nor truly desirable

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13
Q

object relations theory

A
  • Klein and Winnicott
  • objects represent emotionally important people
  • the analysis of interpersonal relationships
    • we relate to others via the images of them in our minds
    • the images do not always match reality and this causes problems
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14
Q

purpose of object relations therapy

A
  • minimize discrepancies between true and false selves
  • help the rational resources of the mind work through irrational defenses
  • help the client see important people in their life the way the actually are, as whole individuals, good and bad
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15
Q

transitional object

A
  • used to bridge gap between private fantasy and reality

- the false self: used to please others

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16
Q

attachment theory

A
  • john bowlby
    • saw attachment as the basis of love
      * based on evolutionary theory
  • mary ainsworth
    * developed the strange situation task to test attachment theory
    - child is briefly separated from and the reunited with the mother
    - look at reaction to mother leaving and returning
17
Q

secure attachment

A
  • 65%
  • greets mother happily when she returns
  • easily soothed, actively explore environment
  • confident faith in themselves and their caregivers
  • adult characteristics: positive attitude toward relationships, easy to get close to others, long stable relationships
18
Q

anxious ambivalent attachment

A
  • 1/3
  • vigilant about mother’s presence and become upset when she leaves
  • caregivers are inconsistent
  • adult characteristic: preoccupied, clingy, obsessed, worry that partners dont love them, jealous
19
Q

avoidant attachment

A
  • 20%
  • not distressed when mother leaves and ignores her when she returns
  • caregivers reject attempts for contact and reassurance
  • adult characteristics: dismissive, angry, distant, uncomfortable being close
20
Q

disorganized attachment

A

children inconsistently reacts to caregiver’s departure and return

21
Q

basic trust v mistrust

A
  • 0 to 2 years
  • learn whether needs will be met, ignored, or overindulged
  • development of hope and confidence
22
Q

autonomy v shame and doubt

A
  • 3 to 4 years

- figuring out who is in charge

23
Q

initiative v guilt

A
  • 4 to 7 years
  • anticipating and fantasizing about life as an adult
  • develop a sense of right and wrong, seen as the beginning of adult morality
24
Q

industry v inferiority

A
  • 8 to 12 years
  • develop skills and abilities to succeed in the world of work and contributing to society
  • must begin to control imagination and unfocused energy
25
Q

identity v identity confusion

A
  • adolescence
  • figure out who i am and what is important
  • choose consistent, meaningful, and useful values and goals
26
Q

intimacy v despair

A
  • young adulthood

- find an intimate life parter

27
Q

generativity v stagnation

A
  • middle age

- turn concerns to the next generation or become passive

28
Q

integrity v despair

A
  • old age
  • brought on by prospective death
  • based on feelings about one’s life
29
Q

five neo-freudian positions

A
  1. much of mental life is unconscious
  2. the mind does many things at once and can be in conflict with itself
  3. events of childhood shape adult personality, especially in styles of social relationships
  4. relationships formed with significant other people establish patterns that are repeated
  5. psychological development involves moving from an unregulated, immature, and self centered state to a more regulated, mature state in which relationships become increasingly important