E N D
1. Personality
3. Psychoanalytic Perspective
4. The Unconscious
5. Freud & Personality Structure
6. Freud & Personality Structure
7. Freud & Personality Development
8. Defense Mechanisms
9. Repression - banishes certain thoughts/feelings from consciousness (underlies all other defense
mechanisms)
Regression - retreating to earlier stage of fixated
development
Reaction Formation - ego makes unacceptable impulses appear as their opposites
Projection - attributes threatening impulses to others
Rationalization - generate self-justifying explanations to hide the real reasons for our actions
Displacement - divert impulses toward a more
acceptable object
Sublimation - transform unacceptable impulse into
something socially valued Defense Mechanisms
10. The Unconscious & Assessment
11. Evaluating the Psychoanalytic Perspective
12. Freud’s Ideas as Scientific Theory
13. Trait Perspective
14. Are There “Basic” Traits?
15. The Big Five
16. Assessing Traits
17. The Humanistic Perspective
18. Maslow & Self-Actualization
19. Roger’s Person-Centered Perspective
20. Assessing & Evaluating the Self
21. Social-Cognitive Perspective
22. Reciprocal Determinism
23. Personal Control
24. Outcomes of Personal Control