,PSY 24031st Edition Lecture 9Outline of Last LectureI. Personality TypesII. Comparison of Safe-Guarding Tendencies with Defense MechanismsIII. Safeguarding TendenciesIV. Creative PowerV. Tools of Individual PsychologyVI. CritiqueVII. Concept of HumanityOutline of Current Lecture I. Background – Karen HorneyII. Psychoanalytic Social TheoryIII. Basic Evil, Basic Hostility, Basic AnxietyIV. Compulsive DrivesV. Intrapsychic ConflictsCurrent LectureI. Background – Karen Horneya. Dad always made her feel stupid and unattractiveb. Made her want to compensate for unattractiveness physicianII. Psychoanalytic Social Theorya. Horney’s Criticisms of Freud’s Theoryi. Too rigid toward new ideasii. Aggression is not inborn but because of environment/cultureiii. Skewed view of feminine psychologyiv. Overemphasis on biology and the pleasure principleb. Psychoanalytic Social theoryi. Stressed the impact of cultureii. Stressed the importance of childhood experiencesiii. Conflict – not only neurotic1. Internal conflict2. External conflict – product of cultural valuesc. Needs of Childreni. Satisfactionii. Safety (needs to be met to be healthy)These notes represent a detailed interpretation of the professor’s lecture. GradeBuddy is best used as a supplement to your own notes, not as a substitute.1. Security and freedom from fear2. Anything a parent does that undermines this safety child experiences basic evil. Ex: isolation, hostilityIII. Basic Evil, Basic Hostility, & Basic Anxietya. Basic Evil – undermining child’s securityb. Basic hostilityi. Repressed feelings of rageii. Originate in childhoodc. Basic anxiety – feelings of isolation and helplessness in a potentially hostile worldIV. Compulsive Drives – Neurotic Needs and Adjustmentsa. Neurotic Needsi. Attempts to reduce basic anxietyii. Strive for idealized self-image1. By attaining perfection or gloryb. Neurotic Adjustmentsi. Moving toward people - attachmentii. Moving against people - hostileiii. Moving away from people – detachedV. Intrapsychic Conflictsa. The Idealized Self-Imagei. The more you live according to this image, the more you hate yourselfii. Tyranny of the “shoulds” – “should”s that the neurotic lives byiii. Neurotic search for gloryiv. Neurotic claims – what they claim credit for isn’t realv. Neurotic pride – being proud of something that isn’t realb. Self-Hatred – real self gets replaced with idealized selfc. Externalization (similar to
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