Which personality theory emphasized importance of unconscious motivations?
Psychodynamic theories, descended from the work of Sigmund Freud, emphasize the importance of unconscious mental forces. Show Freud and psychoanalytic theory. Sigmund Freud originated the psychoanalytic approach based on his experiences in his psychiatric practice and developed a technique called free association, which requires a patient to relax and report everything that comes to mind no matter how trivial or how strange it might seem. Using this technique, he found that patients often revived painful memories reaching back even to early childhood. Freud believed that the mind is like an iceberg, mostly hidden (Figure ), and that free association would ultimately let a patient retrieve memories from the unconscious, memories not ordinarily available because they are threatening in some way. Conscious awareness (the visible part of the iceberg) floats above the surface. The preconscious (the area only shallowly submerged) contains information which can voluntarily be brought to awareness. The unconscious (the larger, deeply submerged portion of the iceberg) contains thoughts, feelings, and memories of which a person is unaware and many of which have been repressed, or forcibly blocked from consciousness. From his work, Freud developed psychoanalysis, a technique for treating psychological disorders by identifying and resolving problems stored in the unconscious. Figure 1 Levels of Consciousness Freudian personality theory. Concomitant with his development of psychoanalysis, Freud constructed a theory of personality, which includes the following observations.
The neo‐Freudians. Other theorists, while they accepted much of the Freudian theory, differed on certain basic premises and introduced additional ideas.
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