Neoanalysts - Lecture Notes PDF

Title Neoanalysts - Lecture Notes
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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101

Carl Jung ∙

Biography



Born in 1875 in Switzerland to a poor country pastor and his wife



Had trouble talking with father



Viewed Mom as both good and bad



Very lonely, introverted child with strange ideas, dreams, and visions that he viewed as valuable communications with the paranormal



May have suffered childhood psychosis; still debated



Career and relationship with Freud



Became a medical doctor who specialized in psychiatry



Met Freud in 1907 and quickly became close with him



Association with Freud ended in 1913 over Freud’s preoccupation with sexuality



The break left both men devastated.



Jung began a period of self-analysis and writing in “The Red Book”



He developed his own school of thought called analytical psychology.



The Levels of the Psyche



The Conscious Ego: similar in scope and meaning to Freud’s concept of the ego



The Personal Unconscious: contains thoughts and feelings that aren’t currently part of conscious awareness. Thoughts are sometimes repressed but sometimes they’re just not consciously being thought about.

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



The Collective Unconscious: a deeper level of unconsciousness made up of powerful emotional symbols called archetypes common to all people; “inherited” from ancestors.



Archetypes



There are as many archetypes as there are personal experiences.

*

The universal and prototypical images, objects, and types of people or experiences that our ancestors have encountered through the generations and have gained importance due to the significant role they play in day to day living

*

Imprinted in our psyche

*

As many as there are personal experiences

*

Most commonly manifest themselves in our dreams

*

When attached to personal experiences can make a complex

*

Believed these could take control of the personality if too prominent

*

Believed groups could project the meaning of archetypes



Common Archetypes



Anima/Animus



Magician/trickster

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Child-God



Mother



Wise old man



Hero



Demon



Shadow



Persona



Hermaphrodite



Complexes



A complex is a group of emotionally charged feelings, thoughts, and ideas that are related to a particular theme.



The strength of any given complex is determined by its libido, or “value.”



The complex has constellating power—it has the ability to draw new ideas into itself and interpret them. Like a magnet that draws related experiences.



Have important implications in interpersonal relationships (how we react towards others).



Functions



Jung posited four functions of the mind: *

Sensing (Is something there?)

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101

*

Thinking (What is it that’s there?)

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Feeling (What’s it worth?)

*

Intuiting (Where did it come from, and where is it going?)

*

All four of these functions are present in all humans, but one usually dominates.



Sensing and Thinking



Feeling and Intuiting



Attitudes



Jung also posited two major attitudes: *

Extraversion

*

Introversion

*

He considered both of these to be separate and opposing constructs, although they’re both present in each person. One usually dominates.



Jung's Typology



Eight combinations of the functions and attitudes



Form the basis of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator



Jung considered himself to be an intuitive introvert.

Alfred Adler

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



Biography



Born in 1870 in Vienna



Second child of the family; older brother was Sigmund, younger brother, Rudolph, died in childhood



Was a frail child who had several brushes with death



Became a doctor to learn how to defeat death



Graduated from the University of Vienna in 1895 and set up his own practice



Married Raissa Epstein and had four children



Disagreements with Freud



1902: invited to join Freud’s Vienna Psychoanalytic Society and eventually became president of it



1911: left the group because of heated disagreements with Freud and the others over the idea that pleasure and sexuality were the prime motivators for humans



Set up his own society called the Society for free Psychoanalysis (later changed to the Society for Individual Psychology).



Individual Psychology



Adler named his theory “Individual Psychology” because he believed that human motivations were complex and unique to the individual.



He thought humans were motivated by their perceived niche in society.



Like Jung, he believed in the teleological (goal-directed) nature of humans.

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Also much more concerned than Freud was with social conditions.



Believed that people had to take preventive measures to avoid personality disturbances.



Inferiority Complex



1930: Adler wrote that a central core of personality was striving for superiority.



Inferiority complex arises when people feel overwhelmed with a sense of helplessness or powerlessness that leaves them feeling inferior.



Normal feelings of incompetence become exaggerated, and person feels hopeless that goals can be achieved.



Dealing with Inferiority



People deal with inferiority in two ways: *

Compensation: trying to build up the weak areas and concentrate on other areas. Motivated to strive from a “felt minus” (feeling of inferiority) to a “felt plus” (feelings of superiority, perfection, and totality).

*

Motivating force behind all behavior is called Striving for Perfection or Superiority—the desire for competence and mastery over one’s environment.



More on overcoming inferiority



Masculine protest—the way in which a person strives for competence and independence rather than being merely an outgrowth of his or her parents

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



Perfection striving—people spend their lives trying to meet their fictional goals (sometimes called fictional finalism)—imagined future achievements.



Superiority Complex



An exaggerated arrogance in an attempt to maintain one’s self-worth and overcome an inferiority complex.



Perceived as obnoxious by others.



Two additions to Adler's theory



Adler’s theory started changing as his thoughts about human motivation changed.



Organ inferiority—the idea that everyone is born with some physical weakness where incapacity or disease is most likely to take root. The body tries to compensate for the weakness in another area—an important motivator of life choices.



Aggressive drive—a reaction to perceived helplessness/inferiority—lashing out against inability to master something.



Style of Life



Established by age 4 or 5 using the Creative Self, the dynamic force that allows us to use our experiences and heredity to construct our “style of life,” including goals, self-concept, feelings for others, and attitudes toward the world.



The interaction between heredity, environment, and one’s creative power.



Should not be rigid or inflexible.

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Can be identified through early memories. *

Doesn’t matter if memories are true or not.

*

Represents one’s first perceptions of self and world.



Social issues



Adler was very concerned about three fundamental social issues, which are all intertwined: *

Occupational tasks—choosing/pursuing a career that makes one feel worthwhile.

*

Societal tasks—creating friendships/social networks

*

Love tasks—finding a suitable life partner.



Adler's Typology



Based on the Greek notion of temperamental humors



Ruling/Dominant



Aggressive & domineering



May bully others



May be passive-aggressive (suicide attempts, addictions)



Seeks to dominate others in some way

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



Getting-leaning



Takes from others



Somewhat passive



Dependent on others for everything



Most common type, according to Adler



Avoiding



Conquers problems by running away



Tries not to deal with problems at all



Phobias are an example



Socially useful



Meets problems realistically



Cooperative and caring



The only orientation thought to grow out of early experiences



Innate trait that makes all humans value societal contributions and helping others



Most productive way to compensate for feelings of inferiority



The more socially oriented, the healthier the person: Gemeinschaftsgefuhl



Maladjustment in Neurotics



Underdeveloped social interest



Live in their own private world



Set their goals too high

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



Have rigid and dogmatic style of life



Might develop in children with physical/intellectual disabilities—the mind sees the body as a burden, and they become self-centered (egoistic) as a result.



Road to physical & mental health is overcome self-centeredness.



Safeguarding Strategies



Neurosis creates a need for safeguarding strategies, similar to defense mechanisms. *

Excuses or rationalizing strategies (“Yes, but…”; “If only…”)

*

Aggressive strategies (open or disguised hostility toward others) *

Depreciation (devalue others through threats or inflating own value)

*

Accusation (blame others—no personal responsibility)

*

Self-accusation (blame self in such a way that it attracts attention, sympathy—sometimes induces guilt in others)

*

Distancing strategies—avoiding situations and problems; avoiding challenges



Parenting: Mom's perspective



Social interest arises from mother-child relationship during first months of infancy



Mom needs to foster a bond that encourages child’s social interest and fosters a sense of cooperation



Mom should be centered on her child’s well-being not her own needs and wants.

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



If she favors the child over the father, child may become spoiled or pampered. If she favors father over child, child may feel neglected and unloved.



Parenting: Father's perspective

*

Father must show caring attitude toward wife and others

*

Ideal father cooperates on equal footing with mother in caring for child & treating child as human being

*

Successful father avoids the errors of emotional detachment and paternal authoritarianism.

*

Emotionally detached fathers child has a sense of neglect and warped social interest; parasitic attachment to Mom

*

Paternal authoritarianism  sees Dad as tyrant; strives for power and personal superiority



Importance of Parents



Adler believed parents were so important early in life that the relationship with mother and father smothers the effects of heredity.



By the time a child is 5, the effects of heredity become blurred by the powerful influences of the child’s social environment.



By this time, environmental forces have shaped or modified nearly every aspect of child’s personality.



Birth Order Effects

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Neo-analysts Lecture Notes PSYC 1101



Adler believed that birth order was an important factor in determining personality.



First child: the worst position to be in.



Second-borne: the best position



Last-borns: second worst position



Birth order has generated a lot of research.



Adler's view of birth order effects



Research about Firstborns/Only children



More achievement-oriented and perfectionist. Also more visits to mental health clinics



More likely to support parental authority



Less open to new ideas



More responsible, ambitious, organized, academically successful, energetic, selfdisciplined, and conscientious.



Negative side: more neurotic, anxious, temperamental



More assertive and dominant



Middle-borns



Lots of research on these children



Less likely to define self-identities by their families



Feel less close to families; more into friends than siblings

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More rebellious, impulsive, less conscientious



Less likely to ask parents for help or visit parents



Report feeling less loved as children



More likely to live farther apart from parents



Later-borns



Charmer of the family



More agreeable



Warmer



More idealistic



Easygoing, trusting, accommodating, altruistic, adventurous



Prone to fantasy, attracted by novelty; untraditional



More sociable, affectionate, fun-loving, excitement-seeking, and more selfconscious.



Bottom line on birth order effects



Not shown consistently across studies



Birth order alone is not as big of a factor as birth order combined with other factors such as number of children, level of conflict between each child and parents, gender of the children, spacing between children, temperament, social class, and loss of parent.

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Birth order studies usually do not separate biological birth order from rearing order. They need to do this.



Social Interest



For Adler, social interest was of supreme importance. Not synonymous with charity.



The sole yardstick for measuring psychological health



The “sole criterion for human values”



The only gauge for judging one’s worth and the value of a life.



To the degree that people possess true social interest, they are psychologically mature.

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