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Personality
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A pattern of enduring, distinctive thoughts, emotions and behaviors that characterize the way an individual adapts to the world
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Psychodynamic perspecitves
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The view that personality is primarily unconscious (beyond awareness) and develops in stages. Most psychoanalytic perspectives emphasize that early experiences with parents play a role in sculpting personality
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Freudian slips
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Misstatements Freud believed to be revealed unconscious thoughts
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Psychoanalysis
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Freud's approach to personality
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Hysteria
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Physical symptoms that have no physical cause
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Overdetermined
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Had a multitude of causes in the unconscious
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Id
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Consists of unconscious drives and is the individual's reservoir of psychic energy, has no contact with reality, works according to the pleasure principle (seeks pleasure, avoids pain)
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Ego
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Structure of personality that deals with the demands of reality, abides by reality principle (tries to bring the individual pleasure within the norms of society)
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Superego
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Harsh internal judge of our behavior (judges our morality), also only considers reality (considers if the id's impulses can be satisfied in acceptable moral terms)
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Defense mechanisms
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Reduce anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality
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Repression
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The master defense mechanism; the ego pushes unacceptable impulses out of awareness, back into the unconscious mind
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Rationalization
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The ego replaces a less acceptable motive with a more acceptable one
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Displacement
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The ego shifts feelings toward an unacceptable object to another, more acceptable object
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Sublimation
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The ego replaces an unacceptable impulse with a socially acceptable one
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Projection
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The ego attributes personal shortcomings, problems and faults to others
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