Chapter 2: Problem 9
Give an example from your own life of the superego being overly demanding and cruel to the ego.
Chapter 2: Problem 9
Give an example from your own life of the superego being overly demanding and cruel to the ego.
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Get started for freeExplain how the concept of resistance can be viewed both as a major contribution to our knowledge and as a way for Freud to protect his theory against attack.
The author of a popular textbook on introductory psychology (which I use when I teach that course concludes that the following evidence disproves Freud's construct of repression: "Shouldn't we expect children who have witnessed a parent's murder to repress the experience? A study of sixteen 5- to 10-year-old children who had this horrific experience found that not one repressed the memory. Shouldn't survivors of Nazi death camps have banished the atrocities from consciousness? With rare exceptions, they remember all too well." (Myers, \(2001,\) p. 498 ) Why is the author's conclusion incorrect?
Give an example from your own life of an undesirable id impulse overcoming the ego's restrictions and defenses.
How might Freud's personality and life experiences have influenced: (a) his conclusions regarding the Oedipus complex? (b) his belief that nearly all of personality is unconscious?
Give an example from your own life, or from the life of someone you know well, which shows that anxiety can be just as painful as (or even more painful than) a physical injury.
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