Theories of Personality Notes
Theories of Personality Notes
Theories of Personality Notes
Defense Mechanisms
- It helps the ego to avoid dealing directly with
sexual and aggressive impulses and to defend
itself against the anxiety that accompanies them
(1) Repression It is the most basic of the
defense mechanisms. When the ego is threatened
by undesirable id impulses, it forces threatening
feelings into the unconscious.
(2) Reaction Formation repressed impulse
becomes conscious by adopting a disguise that is
directly opposite to its original form
(3) Displacement unacceptable urges are
redirected onto a variety of people or objects so
that the original impulse is disguised or concealed
(4) Fixation when the prospect of taking the next
psychological stage becomes too anxiety
provoking, the ego may resort to the strategy of
remaining at the present, more comfortable
psychological stage. This is held universally and
demands a more or less permanent expenditure of
psychic energy.
(5) Regression a reversion in which during
times of stress and anxiety of a developmental
stage, the libido reverts back to an earlier stage.
Infantile and rigid in nature just like fixation, but is
usually temporary.
(6) Projection seeing in others unacceptable
feelings or tendencies that actually resides in ones
own unconscious. The ego may reduce the anxiety
by attributing the unwanted impulse to an external
object, usually another person. A severe variety of
it is called paranoia.
(7) Introjection - a defense mechanism whereby
people incorporate positive qualities of another
person into their own ego. People introject
characteristics that they see as valuable and that
will permit them to feel better about themselves.
(8) Sublimation is the repression of the genital
aim of Eros by substituting a cultural or social aim.
(9) Rationalization involves covering up the true
reasons for actions, thoughts, or feelings by
making up excuses and incorrect explanations
(10) Denial is refusing to recognize some
Positions
- Infants attempt to deal with life instincts and
death instincts, and they attempt to organize these
experiences into positions, or ways of dealing
with both internal and external objects. The term
position was used to indicate that positions
alternate back and forth. They are not stages of
development through which a person passes.
(1) Paranoid-Schizoid Position (3-4mos.)
- a way of organizing experiences that includes
both paranoid feelings of being persecuted and a
splitting of internal and external objects into good
and bad.
- Paranoid-Schizoid position develops during
which the egos perception of the external world is
subjective and fantastic rather than objective and
real.
- The child alternately experiences feelings of
gratification and frustration. In order to tolerate
these feelings, the ego then splits itself, retaining
parts of the life and death instincts while deflecting
parts of both instincts onto the breast.
Persecutory breast
Ideal breast which provides love, comfort, and
gratification.
- Thus, the persecutory feelings are considered to
be paranoid; that is, they are not based on any real
or immediate danger from the outside world.
- In the young childs schizoid world, rage and
destructive feelings are directed toward the bad
breast, while feelings of love and comfort are
associated with the good breast.
- Language is not used to identify the good and
bad breast, they use a biological disposition.
(2) Depressive Position (5-6 mos.)
- An infant begins to view external objects as
whole and to see that good and bad exist in the
same person.
- The infant develops a more realistic picture of the
mother and recognizes that she is an independent
person who can be both good and bad.
- The ego is beginning to mature to the point at
MARGARET MAHLER
- Psychological birth begins during the first
weeks of postnatal life and continues for the next 3
years or so. It meant that the child becomes an
individual separate from his or her primary
caregiver, an accomplishment that leads ultimately
to a sense of identity.
- The child proceeds through a series of three
major developmental stages and four substages to
achieve psychological birth and individuation:
First Stage: Normal Autism
- spans from birth until about age 3 or 4 weeks
- Newborn infant satisfies various needs within the
all-powerful protective orbit of a mothers care.
- This stage is a period of absolute primary
narcissism in which an infant is unaware of any
other person unlike Klein who conceptualized a
newborn infant as being terrified.
- An objectless stage when an infant naturally
searches for the mothers breast.
HEINZ KOHUT
- He emphasized the process by which the self
evolves from a vague and undifferentiated image
to a clear and precise sense of individual identity.
- He defined the self as the center of the
individuals psychological universe and the
center of initiative and recipient of impressions.
- He also focused on early mother-child
relationship as the key to later development just
like other object relations theorists.
- Infants require adult caregivers not only to gratify
physical needs but also to satisfy psychological
needs. The adults or selfobjects must treat infants
as if they had a sense of self.
- Through the process of empathic interaction,
neurotic or healthy.
- Social rather than biological forces are
paramount in personality development.
- Horney criticized Freud on several accounts:
(1) strict adherence to orthodox psychoanalysis
would lead to stagnation in both theoretical and
therapeutic practice.
(2) She objected to Freuds ideas on feminine
psychology
(3) psychoanalysis should move beyond instinct
theory emphasize the importance of cultural
influences in shaping personality
The Impact of Culture
- Modern culture is based on competition among
individuals.
- Competitiveness and the basic hostility it
spawns result in feelings of isolation. These
feelings of being alone in a potentially hostile world
lead to intensified needs for affection, which in
turn, causes people to overvalue love.
- They see love and affection as solution to their
problems. Desperate need for love can lead to the
development of neuroses.
The Importance of Childhood Experiences
- Childhood is the age from which the vast majority
of problems arise.
- Horney hypothesized that a difficult childhood is
primarily responsible for neurotic needs. These
needs become powerful because they are the
childs only means of gaining feelings of safety.
- But it should be the sum total of childhood
experiences, no single early experience is
responsible for later personality.
Basic Hostility and Basic Anxiety
- Each person begins life with the potential for
healthy development, but favorable conditions for
growth are needed conditions that provide feelings
of safety and satisfaction and permit them to
grow in accordance with their real self.
- If parents do not satisfy the childs need for safety
and satisfaction, the child develops feelings of
basic hostility toward the parents.
- This hostility is often repressed and takes the
Self-Hatred
People with a neurotic search for glory can never
be happy with themselves because when they
realize that their real self does not match the
insatiable demands of their idealized self, they will
begin to hate and despise themselves.
- Horney recognized six ways in which people
express self-hatred:
(1) relentless demands on the self
(2) merciless self-accusation
(3) self-contempt
(4) self-frustration
(5) self-torment or self-torture
(6) self-destructive actions and impulses
Feminine Psychology
* Psychic differences between men and women
are not the result of anatomy but rather of cultural
and social expectations
- Oedipus complex is not universal, instead is
found only in some people and is an expression for
the neurotic need for love.
- A child may passionately cling to one parent and
express (neurotic need for love) and express
jealousy toward the other, as means of alleviating
basic anxiety and not manifestations of an
anatomically based Oedipus complex.
- The childs main goal is security not sexual
intercourse.
- Horney agreed with Adler that women possess a
Psychotherapy
-The general goal of Horneyian therapy is to help
patients gradually grow in the direction of selfrealization. More specifically, the aim is to have
patients give up their idealized self-image,
relinquish their neurotic search for glory, and
change selfhatred to an acceptance of the real
self.
- Self-understanding is the key to positive change.
- Successful therapy is built on patients selfanalysis (idealized self-image vs. real self).
- In terms of techniques, Freudian dream
interpretation and free association are employed.
Horney saw dreams as attempts to solve conflicts.
- When therapy is successful, patients gradually
develop confidence in their ability to assume
responsibility for their psychological development,
they move toward self-realization.
Critique of Horney
- The strength of Horneys theory is her lucid
portrayal of the neurotic personality. Her
comprehensive descriptions of neurotic
personalities provide an excellent framework for
understanding unhealthy people.
- A serious limitation to her theory is that her
references to the normal or healthy people are
general and not well-explicated. There was no
clear picture of what self-realization would be.
Related Research
- The Neurotic Compulsion to Avoid the Negative.
Neuroticism is associated with setting avoidance
goals rather than approach goals. High levels of
neuroticism is also associated with experiencing
more negative emotion and being more likely to
develop generalized anxiety disorder.
- Neuroticism can also be seen in a positive light.
For those people high in neuroticism, they have