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Psychodynamic strengths/limitations
Descripción
A Levels Psychology Mapa Mental sobre Psychodynamic strengths/limitations, creado por Greenbird el 02/04/2014.
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a levels
psychology
psychology
a levels
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Greenbird
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Resumen del Recurso
Psychodynamic strengths/limitations
Strengths
Freud recognised childhood as a critical period of development and identified sexual and unconscious influences
There is evidence that childhood experiences do impact adult personality, e.g. many sex offenders were abused
Enormously influential in psychology and beyond
Daily life: Freudian slips, concepts must contain some truth
Psychoanalytical methods still used
Freud began talking therapies
Idiographic approach that gives a rich picture of personality dynamics
Recognises the complexity of thought and behaviour, and the potential importance of dreams and accidental behaviour
Unconscious does impact behaviour and 'iceberg' may be right
Freud's theories offer causal explanations for underlying psychological conditions
Shows the value of individual and detailed case studies for highlighting psychological ideas
Limitations
Lacks rigorous research support, especially about normal development
Evidence mainly from case studies of middle-class, white, adult, female Europeans even though theory of child development
Case studies can't be generalised
Freud's use of case studies poorly controlled: retrospective notes and data collection, subjective interpretations, potential investigator bias
Difficult to falsify, e.g. someone may be diagnosed as regressing to the oral stage but this can be retentive or expulsive, covering all symptoms
Most of the process cannot be directly observed or tested so hard to construct testable hypotheses
Hard to evaluate effectiveness because of problems defining an illness, knowing when there has a been a cure and spontaneous remission rates
Reduces human activity to a basic set of structures which are reifications and can't be directly studied
Deterministic: infant behaviour determined by innate forces and adult behaviour by childhood experiences
Original theory over-emphasises innate biological forces and especially sex
Stage theory too neat
Fundamental disagreements re the nature and/or existence of the unconscious
Karl Popper: theory of unconscious mind not falsifiable and therefore unscientific, objected to non-falsifiable investigations of the mind
Feminists: too male-oriented, sees female as inferior because of weak ego compared to male
No research evidence for Oedipus complex or penis envy
Pessimistic and backwards looking as person always having to overcome child conflicts and repressed memories
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