Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Sigmund Freud Essay -- essays research papers fc
 Freud didn't exactly invent the idea of the conscious versus unconscious   mind, but he certainly was responsible for making it popular. The conscious   mind is what you are aware of at any particular moment, your present   perceptions, memories, thoughts, fantasies, feelings, etc. Working closely   with the conscious mind is what Freud called the preconscious, what we might   today call "available memory:" anything that can easily be made conscious,   the memories you are not at the moment thinking about but can readily bring   to mind. Now no one has a problem with these two layers of mind. But Freud   suggested that these are the smallest parts. The largest part by far is the   unconscious. It includes all the things that are not easily available to   awareness, including many things that have their origins there, such as our   drives or instincts, and things that are put there because we can't bear to   look at them, such as the memories and emotions associated with trauma.   According to Freud, the unconscious is the source of our motivations, whether   they be simple desires for food or sex, neurotic compulsions, or the motives   of an artist or scientist. And yet, we are often driven to deny or resist   becoming conscious of these motives, and they are often available to us only   in disguised form. Freudian psychological reality begins with the world, full   of objects. Among them is a very special object, the organism. The organism   is special in that it acts to survive and reproduce, and it is guided toward   those ends by its needs such as hunger, thirst, the avoidance of pain, and   sex. A part -- a very important part -- of the organism is the nervous   system, which has as one its characteristics a sensitivity to the organism's   needs. At birth, that nervous system is little more than that of any other   animal, an "it" or id. The nervous system, as id, translates the organism's   needs into motivational forces. Freud also called them wishes. This   translation from need to wish is called the primary process.   The id works in keeping with the pleasure principle, which can be understood   as a demand to take care of needs immediately. Just picture the hungry   infant, screaming itself blue. It doesn't "know" what it wants in any adult   sense; it just knows that it wants it and it wants it now. The infant, in the   Freudian view, is pure, or ...              ... and represents the resurgence of the   sex drive in adolescence, and the more specific focusing of pleasure in   sexual intercourse. Freud felt that masturbation, oral sex, homosexuality,   and many other things we find acceptable in adulthood today, were immature.   This is a true stage theory, meaning that Freudians believe that we all go   through these stages, in this order, and pretty close to these ages.   Some of Freud's ideas are clearly tied to his culture and era. Other ideas   are not easily testable. Some may even be a matter of Freud's own personality   and experiences. But Freud was an excellent observer of the human condition,   and enough of what he said has relevance today that he will be a part of   personality textbooks for years to come. Even when theorists come up with   dramatically different ideas about how we work, they compare their ideas with   Freud's.     BIBLIOGRAPHY  McCary, J L. Psychology of Personality. New York 1956.  Blum G S. A study of the Psychoanalytic Theory of Psychosexual Development   NY 1949  Brill A. Freud's contribution to psychiatric. NY 1944  Reuben Fine. A critical re-evaluation of his theories NY 1962  P. Rieff. Freud The mind of the moralist NY 1959                       
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