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Neo-analytic approach
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The approach to personality psychology that is concerned with tthe individual's sense of self(ego) as the core of personality
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Personal unconscious vs collective unconscious
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Personal unconscious: According to Jung, the component of the mind that contains thoughts and feelings that are not currently a part of conscious awareness
collective unconscious: According to Jung, the component of the mind that contains a deeper level of unconscioiusness made up of archetypes that are common across all people
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Jung's four fucntions of the mind
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Sensing
Thinking
Feeling
Intuiting
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Extroversion vs introversion
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Extroversion: term used by Jung to describe the directing of the libido, or psychic energy, toward thingsin the external world.
introversion: term used by Jung to describe the directing of the libido, or psycic energy , toward things in the internal world
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Individual Psychology
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Alfred adler's theory of personality that stresses the unique motivations of individuals and the importance of each person's perceived niche in society
Three fundamental social issues:
Occupational tasks
Societal tasks
Love tasks
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Inferiority complex
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According to Adler, an individual's exaggerated feelings of personal incompetence that result from an overwhelming sense of helplessness or some experience that leaves him or her powerless
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Superiority complex
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According to Adler, an exagerrated arrogance that an individual develops in order to overcome an inferitority complex
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Organ inferiority
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Adler's concept that everyone is born wit some phsycial weakness at whch point incapacity and disease are most likely to take place, but the body attempts to make up for the deficiency in another area.
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Aggression drive
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Adler's concept that an individual is driven to lash out against the inablitity to achieve or master soemthing, as a reaction to perceived helplessness.
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Adler's personality typology
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4 functions
2 attitudes
8 types
Determined by the person’s dominant function and dominant attitude
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Basic anxiety
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Horney: a child’s fear of being alone, helpless, and insecure
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Object relations theories
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The approach to personality that focuses on teh objects of psychic drives and the imprtance of relation with other individuals
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Symbiotic psychotic vs normal symbiotic
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Symbiotic psychotic: according to Margaret mahler, the forming of emtional ties that are so strong taht a child is unbale to form a sense of self
Normal symbiotic: the forming of ties between a child and morhter in whcih the child develops empathty and the sense of being a seperate but loving person
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Self-monitoring
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Mark snyder's concept of self-observation and self-control guided by situational cuesabout the social appropiateness of behavior
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Self-presentation
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A term used by mark Synder to describe doing what is socially expected.
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