Introduction DP
Introduction DP
Introduction DP
psychology
• Erikson's Psychosocial
Developmental Theory.
• Freud's Psychosexual
Developmental Theory.
• Piaget's Cognitive
Developmental Theory.
• Erikson's theory described the
impact of social experience across
the whole lifespan. Erikson was
interested in how social interaction
and relationships played a role in the
development and growth of human
beings.
• The preconscious consists of anything that
could potentially be brought into the
conscious mind.
• The conscious mind contains all of the
thoughts, memories, feelings, and wishes of
which we are aware at any given moment.
This is the aspect of our mental processing
that we can think and talk about rationally.
This also includes our memory, which is not
always part of consciousness but can be
retrieved easily and brought into awareness.
• The unconscious mind is a reservoir of
feelings, thoughts, urges, and memories that
are outside of our conscious awareness. The
unconscious contains contents that are
unacceptable or unpleasant, such as
feelings of pain, anxiety, or conflict.
• Freud's psychoanalytic theory
(1923) saw the psyche structured
into three parts (i.e., tripartite), the
id, ego and superego, all
developing at different stages in
our lives. These are systems, not
parts of the brain, or in any way
physical.
• According to Freud, the id is the source of all
psychic energy, making it the primary component
of personality.
• The id is the only component of personality that is
present from birth.
• This aspect of personality is entirely unconscious
and includes instinctive and primitive behaviors.
• The id is driven by the pleasure principle, which
strives for immediate gratification of all desires,
wants, and needs. If these needs are not satisfied
immediately, the result is a state anxiety or
tension. For example, an increase in hunger or
thirst should produce an immediate attempt to eat
• The Ego develops from the id and ensures
that the impulses of the id can be expressed in a
manner acceptable in the real world.
• The ego functions in the conscious,
preconscious, and unconscious mind.
• The ego is the component of personality that is
responsible for dealing with reality
• The ego operates based on the reality principle,
which strives to satisfy the id's desires in realistic
and socially appropriate ways. The reality
principle weighs the costs and benefits of an
action before deciding to act upon or abandon
impulses.
The superego
• The superego holds the internalized moral standards
and ideals that we acquire from our parents and society
(our sense of right and wrong