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This is a 3 page paper which examines the sociological concept of ID, Ethnocentrism and Social Institution.
The bibliography has 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JHConc.rtf
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interact with each others. Sociology concerns itself with the social rules and regulations or process which either binds people together or separates them not just as individuals, but also as
members of groups, associations and institutions. There are many concepts or ideas that together formulate the study of society. This paper will examine only a few of those
concepts. EGO, SUPEREGO AND ID Sigmund Freud proposed that the unconscious mind operates based on a particular structure. Freud divided the structure of the unconscious mind into three parts:
the Ego, the Superego and the Id (Ego, 2006). Long before Freud, the Greeks felt that the soul was divided into three parts which they categorized as the desiring
part (Freud refers to this as the Id), the spirited part and the reasoning part (Ego, 2006). Freud described the Id as representing the primary process thinking (Ego, 2006).
The Id is supposed to be the area where our subconscious mind forms its most need gratification type thoughts (Ego, 2006). Freud felt that the Id is organized around
the primitive instinctual urges of aggression, sexuality, and the desire for instance release or gratification (Ego, 2006). The Superego is identified as the part of the brain that represents our
conscience thoughts and counteracts the ID (Ego, 2006). Freud stated that the Superego is the moral agent that links the conscious and unconscious minds (Ego, 2006). The Superego
is opposite of the Id. To balance the counterparts of the Id and the Superego, the Ego is in place between the two. Freud felt that the Ego consists
of the conscious sense of self and world, the structured set of unconscious defenses which define the individual differences in character and personality (Ego, 2006). A healthy Ego relies on
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