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Sigmund Freud
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- Neurologist
- Founded the discipline of psychoanalysis |
The "talking cure"
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- Patient talks through his or her problems
- To locate and release powerful emotional energy that had initially been rejected or imprisoned in the unconscious mind - Coined by Anna O., Josef Breuer's patient |
Repression
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- The psychological attempt by an individual to repel its own desires and impulses towards pleasurable instincts
- Buried memories or traumatic experiences - A defense mechanism |
Free association
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- Patients are invited to relate
whatever comes into their minds during the analytic session, and not to
censor their thoughts
- This technique is intended to help the patient learn more about what he or she thinks and feels, in an atmosphere of non-judgmental curiosity and acceptance - Originally devised by Freud's coworker Josef Breur |
What are some unconscious notions that free association uncovers?
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- Transference
- Resistance - Projection |
Transference
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Unwittingly transferring feelings about one person to become applied to another person
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Projection
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Projecting internal feelings or motives, instead ascribing them to other things or people
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Resistance
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Holding a mental block against remembering or accepting some events or ideas
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Some of Freud's psychoanalytic interventions
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- Dream analysis
- The "talking cure" - Free association - Transference - Pressure technique |
Freud thought personality was developed by ___ ___.
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Childhood experiences
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Pressure technique
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- Form of hypnosis
- A hand was pressed on the patient's forehead, while the patient was lying down on a couch, and questions were asked |
Preconscious
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A layer between conscious and unconscious thought
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Oedipus complex
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- The emotions and ideas that the mind keeps in the unconscious, via dynamic repression, that concentrate upon a boy’s desire to sexually possess his mother, and kill his father
- Occurs during the Phallic Stage |
Electra complex
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- Female version of the Oedipus complex, where she is fixated on her father
- A term not authorized by Freud |
Freud's concept of human development
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As humans develop, they become fixated on different and specific objects through their stages of development because humans are born "polymorphously perverse", meaning that any number of objects could be a source of pleasure
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