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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper that briefly discusses Freud’s thoughts abut his ego, id, superego, unconscious, and conscious. The paper explains some common defense mechanisms and how they are useful but could also be harmful. The also reports some of Jung’s major thoughts and compares him to Freud. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PG698712.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that people cannot deal with that cannot be brought into the consciousness but they have a strong influence on conscious thoughts and actions. People are primarily motivated by the unconscious
mind and they are motivated by the pleasure principle (Krishna Psychology, 2011). The unconscious is the largest part and it is the source of motivations. Freud separated the personality into
three components: the Ego, the Id, and the Superego. The id represents the most basic desires of humans and motivate people to satisfy these desires. The id works with the
pleasure principles and is in the unconscious mind (Boeree, 2009). The superego tells the person that those desires must only be met through socially accepted behaviors. The ego tries to
mediate between the id and the superego trying to help the person make rational decisions. The id works with the reality principle and is in the unconscious mind, the ego
is partially unconscious and partially conscious, and the superego is also partially unconscious and partially conscious (Beystehner, 2006). In other words, the ego is the person and the superego is
guilt. Freud also introduced many defense mechanisms humans use to justify acts or to avoid situations that would be uncomfortable. He recognized that it was difficult for humans. The
unconscious is the source of all motives, some of which would not be acceptable in society so humans deny or disguise these motivations (Boeree, 2009). This leaves the ego feeling
a great deal of anxiety and the person must defend themselves against these kinds of conflicts. These are intended to protect the ego. Some of the most common defense mechanisms
are: repression is an act of the unconscious to keep disturbing thought away from the ego; projection is the act of projecting ones own thoughts on to another person; sublimation,
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