Freud's Psychodynamic Theory of Personality
Sigmund Freud's psychodynamic perspective was the first comprehensive theory of personality, designed to explain a wide range of both normal and abnormal behaviors. Freud proposed that personality is fundamentally shaped by unconscious drives, particularly those related to sex and aggression, as well as by experiences during childhood. These elements create lifelong conflicts between the conscious and unconscious mind that define an individual's character.
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Psychoanalytical Theories
Freud's Psychodynamic Theory of Personality
A therapist is working with a client who, despite a stated desire for a stable and loving partnership, consistently gets involved in tumultuous relationships with emotionally unavailable partners. The client cannot consciously explain this self-sabotaging pattern. If the therapist operates from a perspective that prioritizes the influence of unconscious conflicts and unresolved issues from early childhood, what would be the most likely explanation for the client's behavior?
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Freud's Concept of the Unconscious Mind
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Freud's Use of Case Studies