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As a child, Adler had an intense rivalry with... |
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An older brother named Sigmund |
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Individual psychology can be considered to be |
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People strive toward superiority through one of two paths. One is the route of social interest; the other is the road of |
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exaggerated personal gain |
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To Adler, the one dynamic force behind a person's activity is |
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the striving for success or superiority. |
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According to Adler, a person's final goal is |
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a creation of the creative power. |
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Adler insisted that personality is shaped by |
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Adler called ideas that have no real existence yet influence individuals as if they really existed |
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The doctrine that motivation should be considered according to its final purpose or aim is called |
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Alder believed that organ inferiorities |
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stimulate feelings of inferiority. |
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Gemeinschaftsgefühl is usually translated as |
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According to Adler _________________ is the "sole criterion of human values." |
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A person's final goal is ultimately shaped by |
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A person's style of life becomes fairly well established at about what age? |
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Adler held that people are continually pushed by the need to overcome inferiority feelings and pulled by the desire for |
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To Adler, the core of maladjustment is |
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keys to understanding one's style of life. |
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According to Adler, the creative power |
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shapes one's style of life. |
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Adler believed that the goals of a neurotic |
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are exaggerated and unrealistic. are compensations for organ inferiorities. |
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frequently feel neglected. |
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Adlerian safeguarding tendencies are |
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sometimes conscious and sometimes unconscious. |
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Safeguarding tendencies protect exaggerated feelings of superiority against |
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Compared with Freud, Adler |
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had a more positive view toward women. |
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Style of life is most reliably revealed by |
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According to Adler, dreams |
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provide information for dealing with future problems. |
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Although he was not an original member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society, Adler was the first to break from Freud. |
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Although he was an original member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society, Adler was not a disciple of Freud. |
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Among many differences between Freud and Adler were their attitudes toward Americans. |
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Both Adler and Freud came from middle-class Jewish backgrounds and grew up in the Vienna area. |
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Most people who have read Freud and Adler agree that Adler was the better writer |
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During the first few years after breaking from Freud's organization, Adler was unable to write or to continue his practice of psychotherapy. |
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According to Adler, people's present behaviors are strongly influenced by their experiences of the past. |
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Adler believed that the most important fiction is the goal of superiority or success. |
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Causality is an explanation of behavior in terms of future goals and aspirations. |
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Style of life is usually developed between the 10th and 12th years of life, according to Adler. |
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Everyone has feelings of inferiority. |
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Even criminals possess some amount of social interest. |
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Heredity and learning account for all personality development |
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People with very high levels of social interest eventually become self-centered. |
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Social interest is synonymous with charity and unselfishness. |
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The fact that all of us have survived infancy indicates that we have at least some potential for social interest. |
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Adler believed that people are basically what they make of themselves. |
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Most neurotics have a neglected or pampered style of life. |
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A pampered style of life is the result of too much mother love. |
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Safeguarding tendencies protect the ego from the pain of anxiety. |
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Adler believed that the psychic life of women is essentially the same as that of men. |
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Adler agreed with Freud that dreams are expressions of infantile wishes. |
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Adler believed that dreams are forward looking. |
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Adler hypothesized that physical deficiencies can contribute to either a useful or a useless style of life. |
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Adler believed that people's interpretations of experiences are more important than the experiences themselves. |
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1. According to Adler, the striving for ____________________ or success is the dynamic force behind our actions. |
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1. According to Adler, the striving for ____________________ or success is the dynamic force behind our actions. |
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2. Adler believed that people are motivated more by _______________ than by reality. |
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3. Organ _________________ suggests that a diseased or inferior part of the body expresses the direction of a person’s goal. |
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4. To Adler, personality is molded by subjective ________________ rather than by reality. |
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5. Fictions are people’s expectations of the ____________________. |
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6. Lack of ____________________ is the essence of maladjustment. |
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7. Gemeinschaftsgefühl, or ________________________, refers to a positive feeling for all humanity. |
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8. Unhealthy people strive for personal _____________________, whereas psychologically healthy people strive for the success of all people. |
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9. Adler held that personality is shaped by the ________________ power, although heredity and environment contribute to its building material. |
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10. Unhealthy people have an essentially useless ________________ of life, whereas healthy people have a useful one. |
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11. Maladjusted people tend to set their goals too ______________. |
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12. People with a ___________________ style of life try to make permanent a parasitic relationship with their mother. |
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13. Safeguarding tendencies protect a person from ___________________. |
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14. Adler believed that if style of life changes, then one’s ________________________ should also change. |
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15. Two common excuses are ___________________ and “Yes, but.” |
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16. The masculine _________________ is a false belief that men are superior to women. |
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17. Adler was a ____________________-born child, and he believed that children who enter their family in that position are likely to develop strong social interest. |
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Jung's mid-life crisis followed soon after the break in his friendship with |
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Jung divided the unconscious psyche into two parts: the personal and the |
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In analytical psychology, the center of consciousness is |
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The contents of the personal unconscious are called |
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components of the collective unconscious. |
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shows itself as the social role we reveal to others. |
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According to Jung, a person's first test of courage is to |
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the feminine side of men. |
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Irrational moods in men are represented by the |
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The archetype of nourishment and destruction is the |
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The great mother archetype is most likely to be symbolized by |
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The wise old man archetype represents |
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ften has a tragic flaw.
B) is sometimes part god.
C) fights to conquer evil.
D) may be represented by comic book characters such as Superman. |
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The self is usually represented by this symbol. |
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In Jungian psychology, the self |
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is the archetype of completion and wholeness.
B) is the center or essence of personality.
C) includes the other archetypes. |
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If Freud's theory is basically causal and Adler's is essentially teleological, then Jung's theory is |
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both causal and teleological. |
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In Jungian psychology, introversion and extraversion are regarded as |
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According to Jung, extraversion is basically |
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Introverted feeling types |
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rely on subjective evaluations rather than the opinions of others. |
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Jung regarded thinking and feeling as |
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Which of these is NOT a substage of Jung's childhood period? |
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Jung believed that the most important stage of life is middle life. At that time a person should |
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move from an extraverted attitude toward an introverted one. |
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The process of becoming whole or complete-that is, actualizing the various components of personality-is called |
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According to Jung, these dreams originate from the collective unconscious rather than from personal experiences of the dreamer. |
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Most research on Jungian concepts has involved the notion of |
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Jung regarded his father as reliable but powerless. |
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Jung's concept of the personal unconscious is essentially the same as Freud's concept of the unconscious plus the preconscious. |
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Jung wrote several of his most important books during the three-year period following his split from Freud. |
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Complexes are contents of the collective unconscious. |
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In Jungian psychology, the ego is the center of consciousness but not the center of personality. |
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Archetypes are expressed through dreams, fantasies, delusions, and hallucinations. |
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The first test of courage for a man is to confront his anima. |
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The persona is an archetype that refers to the role we adopt in society. |
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To Jung, the ultimate goal in life and the highest level of attainment is self-realization. |
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A woman's masculine side is called the anima. |
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Both women and men have a great mother archetype. |
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The wizard in The Wizard of Oz would symbolize the wise old man archetype. |
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The hero is the archetype of perfection and of a person who cannot be conquered or slain. |
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The tendency to move toward perfection and completion is symbolized by the self archetype. |
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The mandala symbolizes the shadow archetype. |
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Jungian psychology looks for causal explanations rather than teleological ones. |
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The two attitudes in Jungian psychology are masculinity and femininity. |
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A psychologically healthy middle-aged person continues to rely on the social and moral values learned during childhood and youth. |
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Extraverts rely on their subjective view of the world rather than objectivity reality. |
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Feeling, sensing, intuiting, and thinking are the four basic functions in Jungian psychology. |
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The behavior of extraverted sensing people is guided mostly by their subjective opinions. |
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In his stages of development, Jung emphasized early childhood more than any other stage. |
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The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator includes judgment and perception, two functions not included in Jung's concept of types. |
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Like psychoanalysis, Jung's theory does not lend itself easily to falsification. |
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Unlike Freud, Jung was careful to phrase his theory with operationally defined terms. |
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1. Jung’s concept of a ____________________ unconscious is parallel to Freud’s idea of the unconscious. |
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2. The notion of a ______________________ unconscious is Jung’s most controversial and distinctive concept. |
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3. Jung’s ________________ personality was in touch with feelings and intuitions of which his other personality was unaware. |
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4. According to Jung, the ______________________ is the center of consciousness. |
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5. ____________________ are contents of the personal unconscious. |
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6. ____________________ are contents of the collective unconscious |
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7. People dominated by their ______________________ have a shallow personality and strive to project a specific public image. |
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8. Jung believed that recognition of the ______________________ is the first test of a person’s courage. |
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9. The anima is the ___________________ side of men. |
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10. Jung carried on conversations with his __________________ during his midlife crisis. |
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11. The masculine side of women is called the __________________. |
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12. The great mother is the archetype of _________________________ and nourishment. |
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13. The _____________________ archetype symbolizes wisdom and meaning. |
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14. The most comprehensive archetype is the ___________________. |
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15. Thinking, feeling, sensation, and ____________________ make up the four Jungian functions. |
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16. Extraversion and introversion are the two basic _________________. |
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17. The backward flow of psychic energy is called __________________. |
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18. Jung believed that during the ________________________ stage, people should move from an extraverted attitude to an introverted one. |
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19. Jung held that “big dreams” spring from the __________________ unconscious. |
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20. The _____________________, or perfect figure, symbolizes self-realization. |
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21. Jung was _______________________ in his practice of psychotherapy, meaning that he used whatever techniques seemed suitable for a particular patient. |
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22. The notion of ________________________ has received more research emphasis than any other Jungian concept. |
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Klein suggested that the infant's first model for interpersonal relations was |
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One person psychoanalyzed by Melanie Klein was |
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Klein had a bitter rivalry with |
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Anna Freud. her daughter Melitta. |
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Compared with Freudian theory, object relations theory |
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places more emphasis on interpersonal relations. |
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The person or part of a person that satisfies the aim of an instinct is called |
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Like Freud, Klein believed that people are motivated by |
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Klein's two basic psychological positions are |
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the paranoid-schizoid and the depressive. |
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In order to control the good breast and to fight off its persecutors, infants use |
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the paranoid-schizoid position. |
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Klein believed that feelings of anxiety about losing a loved object and a sense of guilt for desiring to destroy that object were part of |
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Klein's psychic defense mechanisms |
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protect the ego against anxiety aroused by destructive fantasies. |
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protect the ego against anxiety aroused by destructive fantasies. |
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Compared to Freud, Klein believed that the superego |
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is much more harsh and cruel. |
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Klein believed that at the end of a successfully resolved Oedipus complex, a girl |
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will develop positive feelings toward both parents. |
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Klein believed that a girl fantasizes that her father's penis feeds the mother with babies during this period. |
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This object relations theorist spent much time observing normal babies as they bonded with their mothers during the first 3 years of life. |
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Mahler's principal concern was with |
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the psychological birth of the child. |
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During the separation-individuation stage, Mahler claimed, children begin to |
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develop feelings of personal identity. |
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Kohut was most interested in the |
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process by which the self evolves. |
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According to Kohut, the needs to exhibit the grandiose self and the idealized parent image are called |
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To Kernberg, this is the key to understanding adult personality. |
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the early mother-child relationship |
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Kernberg was MOST concerned with |
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internalized object relationships. |
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Bowlby's theory assumes that |
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the mother-child bonding becomes a model for the child's future friendships. |
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According to Bowlby, protest is the first stage of |
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Research by Alan Sroufe and his colleagues found that securely attached children tend to be |
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dependent on their mother. |
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