Saturday, April 18, 2020
Psychology Theories Essays - Freudian Psychology, Id,
  Psychology Theories    Sigmund Freud is one of the most famous psychologists to  ever hit the study of psychology. His name alone  symbolizes the importance of his theories, and the name  that comes to most people's heads when saying the word  psychology is Sigmund Freud. Freud was a psychodynamic  psychologist and came from the conservative point of view  which states that man is bad and society is good, which I  do not agree with 100% because not all man's actions are  necessarily bad and with bad intentions.    Freud was a real pessimist when it came to human nature.    He identifies man's weaknesses in saying that man is a  biological creature with biological drives. He reflected these  ideas off of Darwin's original ideas. I do agree with this  theory because man's drives are survival and  self-preservation. Freud also stated that mankind's  aggression helps him to survive, he says that man has an  innate sense of survival. I also agree with this theory  because aggression and dominance guarantees our survival.    He also believed that over the many thousands of years that  man has been alive man developed rational thought. Freud  stated that people do not have to live like animals because  overtime we developed a society that has rules and  regulations in order to keep our animal nature in check. I  agree with Freud on this because of many cases when a  person has some bad intentions in mind but let's them go  when they know the consequences.    Another thing Freud said was the idea of Opposing    Instincts which when comes to mind creates conflict. The  first of the two opposing instincts is the Eros, which is the  life instinct, which also ensures the organisms life. The ID  presses us to survive and pushes us to produce. The Eros  seeks pleasure and then we rationalize it. Next comes the    Thanatos, which is the death instinct, and this instinct says  that all organisms have a death wish towards themselves  and I agree completely. This he says becomes our own  destruction. Freud says it is natural to move towards death  and this I think is obvious. The feelings we have must be  expressed and released and we direct our feelings outward.    This becomes our aggression toward others. Freud's view  on the mind is in the shape of an iceberg. He believes that  mankind's mind works in the unconscious, which I do not  agree with at all I feel that man is mostly conscious when it  comes to behaviors. Every choice that mankind makes he  is aware of, but maybe the consequences of our action  might be unknown.    The Structure of Personality which is another interesting  part of Freud's theory basically states that we have an ID, a    Superego and an Ego. The ID is a biological reservoir of  urges and impulses that need to be gratified. He says the ID  does not have a conscious, it acts on instinct. It seeks out  gratification and pleasure. It is the pleasure principle. The    Superego is the Morality Principle, and the Superego  knows the difference between right and wrong. The    Superego is a bunch of learned internalized morals and  values of society. This is basically the thing that keeps the    ID in check. Freud said that Superego is our conscious,  and that the Superego is the most powerful tool (guilt and  pride). Last but not least is the Ego, which is the reality  principle. The Ego finds socially acceptable ways to satisfy  the ID. It finds the balance between the ID and reality. The  functions of the Ego is to find a compromise between the    ID and the Superego. The Ego must also learn to deal with  anxiety, and it also helps to boost the self-esteem. Without  the Ego there would be no mental health. I completely  agree with Freud's theory of the Structure of Personality  because I feel we have different parts of our behavior that  we can control and that we are conscious about and there  are other behaviors that come directly from our  unconscious. Our ego lies to us, denies, falsifies, and  distorts reality which in turn causes us to create what Freud  likes to call the seven defense mechanisms.    The first of the seven defense mechanisms is Repression.    Repression pushes the problem to the subconscious. It is  the exclusion of impulses and thoughts from the conscious  mind. Next comes Denial, and denial is the cutting of the  conscious mind from external threats. An example of this  would be when you are walking in the mall with your  girlfriend and a beautiful woman walks by and you look but  when your girlfriend asks you say, I wasn't looking at her.    Next there is a defense mechanism    
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