Personality Chapter 5 Vocab

Chapter 5 Voc ab in Pe

27 cards   |   Total Attempts: 182
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Actual self
The self as it is at the moment, including all the person's actual strengths and weaknesses
Aggressive types
Neurotic individuals who protect themselves against feelings of insecurity by exploiting others to feel superior
Arbitrary rightness
A protective device in which people are convinced that they are invariably right in all their judgements
Basic anxiety
The painful psychological state in which a person feels isolate and helpless in a potentially hostile world
Basic conflict
Turmoil created within neuotics because the three major trends are incompatible with one another. As the person indiscriminately pursues the predominant trend and the fulfillment of the needs associated with it, he or she is unable to satisfy the needs associated with the 2 trends that are repressed.
Blind spot
Defense mechanism in which painful experiences are denied or inored because they are at variance with the idealized self
Compartmentalization
Defense mechanism by which neurotics alleviate tensions by seperating beliefs and actions within themselves
Compliant types
Neurotic individuals who cope with feelings of basic anxiety by seeking the approval and affection of others through excessive conformity
Cynicism
Defense mechanism in which the person claims to believe in nothing so that he or she cannot be hurt or disappointed by others
Detatched types
Neurotic individuals who protect themselves by continuous avoidance of others
Elusiveness
Defense mechanism whereby a person refuses to take a position on anything so that he or she can never be proven wrong and criticized or ridiculed by others
Excessive self-control
Defense mechanism whereby a person exercises will-power, consciously or unconsciously, to keep emotional impulses under control
Externalization
Defense mechanism whereby a person experiences inner emotions externally and blames others for her/her own weaknesses and failings
Female masochism
For Freud, a perversion in which women experience a blending of pleasure and pain during certain activities and fantasies. He believed that male masochism occured only in men with feminine natures
Humanistic view of development
An optimistic view of development that sees each person as having intrinsic and unique potential for constructive growth