Saturday, 22 October 2016

SIGMUND FREUD'S STRUCTURE OF PERSONALITY

It’s the first comprehensive theory of personality.
The structure of personality:
Id-
·         the original system of personality
·         the matrix within which the ego and the superego become differentiated
·         consists of everything psychological that is inherited and present at birth
·         reservoir of psychic energy
·         it is in the close touch from bodily processes
·         Freud called the id the “true psychic reality” because it represents the inner world of subjective experience and has no knowledge of objective reality
·         It cannot tolerate increases of energy that are experienced as uncomfortable states of tension
·         Consequently, when tension increases through external or internal stimulation, the id functions to discharge the tension immediately- THIS IS CALLED PLEASURE PRINCIPLE
·         To accomplish its aim, id uses 2 processes:
1.   Reflex actions:  It is inborn
          They are automatic reactions
          They reduce tension immediately
2.   Primary processes:It forms an image of the object that will remove the tension
e.g.- nocturnal dream
note- the hallucinatory experience in which the desired object is present in the form of a memory image is called wish-fulfillment.
Ego-
·         Comes into existence because the needs of the organism require appropriate transactions within the objective world of reality
·         The basic distinction between the id and the ego is that the id knows only the subjective reality of the mind whereas the ego distinguishes between things in the mind and things in the external world.
·         Obeys the reality principle, the aim of reality principle is to prevent the discharge of tension until an object that is appropriate for the satisfaction of the need has been discovered.
·         Operates by the means of secondary process, the ego formulates a plan for the satisfaction of the need and then tests the plan, usually by some kind of action, to see whether or not it will work.
Superego-
·         It is the internal representative of the traditional values and ideals of society as interpreted to the child by its parents and enforced by means of a system of rewards and punishments imposed upon the child.
·         The moral arm of personality
·         Represents the ideal rather than the real or the desire
·         There are 2 subsystems of superego:
1.   Conscience- whatever parents say is improper and punish the child for doing tends to become incorporated into conscience. It punishes the person by making him feel guilty.
2.   Ego-ideal- whatever parents approve of and reward the child for doing tends to become incorporated into its ego-ideal. It reward the person by making him or her feel proud.
This incorporation happens through introjection.

On the development of superego the self-control is substituted for parental-control.