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Freud and the Psychoanalytical Perspective

Teacher: Peterson's Perpetual Puzzles
Across
Partly conscious consists of internalized parental and societal standards.
(Latin for "I") it resides in the conscious and preconscious levels of awareness.
Transferring one's own unacceptable thoughts, motives, or personal qualities to others.
Perspective on personality that emphasizes three factors: influence of unconscious mental processes; importance of sexual and aggressive instincts; enduring consequences of early childhood experiences.
Redirecting anger and other unacceptable impulses toward a less-threatening person or object.
The ego uses unconscious distortions of reality to reduce anxiety.
Freud thought this was composed of three distinct psychological processes - the id, the eo, and the superego.
Keenly aware of external realities, it attempts to facilitate an appropriate and timely gratification of desires.
Consists of thoughts, motives, and memories that can be voluntarily brought to mind.
The "conscience," it operates on a morality principle, seeking to enforce ethical conduct.
Retreating from a threatening situation by reverting to a pattern of behavior characteristic of an earlier stage of development.
Down
Consists of thoughts, feelings, motives, and memories blocked from conscious awareness. Freud thought this level was not directly accessible.
Rational and practical it operates on a reality principle, seeking to mediate between the demands of the id and the superego.
Thinking or behaving in a way that is the opposit of your own unacceptable thought and feelings.
Best-known figure in the history of psychology.
Preventing anxiety-producing thoughts and painful feelings from entering consciousness. Freud believed this is the first and most basic form of anxiety reduction.
Justifying one's actions by using socially acceptable explanations.
An individual's unique and relatively stable pattern of thinking, feeling, and behaving.
(Latin for "it") completely unconscious; consists of innate sexual and aggressive instincts and drives.
Protecting oneself from anxiety-producing information by refusing to acknowledge it.
Consists of thoughts or motives that a person is currently aware of or is remembering.
Impulsive, irrational, and immature; it operates on a pleasure principle, seeking to achieve immediate gratification and avoid discomfort.