Psychoanalysis and Evolutionary Psychology • Common features • Primitive force id, genes – Irrational, single-minded, self-serving • Mechanism to mediate with reality ego, cortex – Permi
Trang 1Chapter Fourteen Personality in Perspective: Overlap and Integration
Trang 2Psychoanalysis and Evolutionary Psychology
• Common features
• Primitive force (id, genes)
– Irrational, single-minded, self-serving
• Mechanism to mediate with reality (ego, cortex)
– Permit planfulness and careful decision making; foster survival
• Connection to the social world (superego, sensitivity
to social influences)
– Reflect social influences on survival
– Fixation and Mating Strategies
• Male and female Oedipal fixation suggest similar behavior as evolutionary theories of mating behavior
Trang 3Psychoanalysis and Self-Regulation
• Similarities in behavior function within hierarchies
– Id functioning and lower-level control behavior
• Spontaneous and responsive to situational cues
– Ego functioning and program-level control behavior
• Involves pragmatic planning and decision making Not impulsive Not principled
– Superego and principle-level control behavior
• Can be reflective of moral principles
• Represents idealized self
Trang 4Psychoanalysis and Cognitive Process
• Similarities between concepts
– Repression and preattentive filtering
– Ego and executive control processes
– Consciousness and attention
– Transference and chronic partial activation of schemas
• Shared focus on automated (unconscious) processes
Trang 5Social Learning, Cognitive, and Self-Regulation
Views
• Shared importance of processes creating cognitive representations of the self and the world
• Common view that expectancies are
determinants of how hard people try to
achieve things
• See goals or incentives as the structures that underlie behavior
Trang 6Hierarchies of Maslow and Self-Regulation
• Higher levels of both hierarchies represent more abstract, subtle, and integrative
concepts than do lower levels
• When problems arise at lower levels of the hierarchies, they become more demanding (functionally superordinate)
• Content of hierarchies are different
– Maslow = motives
– Self-regulation = actions
Trang 7Self-Actualization and Self-Regulation
• Both use the concepts:
– Idealized self and actual (real) self
• Both monitor incongruity between idealized and actual self
Trang 8Traits and Other Models
• Traits are developed early in life
• Traits manifest in several other
approaches under slightly different labels
• Traits may be viewed as:
– Biological temperaments
– Transformations of sexual drives
– Reflections of psychosocial crises
– Learned motive qualities
– Traits
Trang 9Recurrent Themes
• Impulse and Restraint
– A core issue across a broad range of personality theories
– Implicates a two-mode system of cognitive
processing
• Automatic, intuitive, superficial, fast, evolutionarily older
• Rational, deliberative, slower, evolutionarily newer
• Individual vs Group Needs
– Distinctions between self-interest and communal interests that are important issues across multiple theories
Trang 10• Drawing useful elements from multiple theories
• Different ideas are useful for different purposes
• Not necessarily integrative, but often mutually supportive
Trang 11Which Theory is Best
People will believe those theories which “… are most interesting, those which appeal
most urgently to our aesthetic, emotional, and active needs.”
William James