Basic Concepts of Psychoanalysis

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COURSE ASSESSMENT: BASIC CONCEPTS IN PSYCHOANALYSIS

NAME: JISSY JACOB
STUDENT NUMBER: 10102292
INTRODUCTION
Psychoanalysis refers a set of psychotherapeutic and psychological theories and which are associated with techniques. The aim of psychoanalysis is to remove repressed emotions and experiences, to make the conscious mind from unconscious. Psychoanalysis is specially used to treat depression and anxiety disorders. One who think or talk about psychoanalysis, suddenly mind goes to remember the great personality who is none other than Sigmund Freud, the Father of psychoanalysis. Freud explained human personality comprises of three parts namely the id, ego, and superego which help to form complex human behaviours.
In this essay the writer focuses to shed light towards some thoughts like egoism, narcissism, love, illness and so on. Predominantly, the writer would like to co relate the difference between egoism and narcissism. Then the following paragraphs make an attempt to evaluate the Freud’s concept of narcissism. Lastly, the writer critically evaluate the statement i.e., “ A strong egoism is a protection against falling ill, but in the last resort we must begin to love in order not to fall ill, and we are bound to fall ill if, in consequence of frustration, we cannot love”.
TERMINOLOGIES
 EGO: The ego is one of the personality components which are responsible for dealing with reality. The ego develops from the id and it can be expressed to the real world. The ego function s both in conscious, preconscious and unconscious mind. It is based on the reality principle which struggle to satisfy desires of the ids.
 NARCISSISM: “The attitude of a person who treats his own body in the same way in which the body of a sexual objec...

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...ing either to fashion links with the outside world or to draw satisfaction from within. Between these two extremes every imaginable intermediate situation—or "ego state"—may be met with. But such ego states also depend on an outside world with the capacity to transform the ego-ideal into an ideal ego which, as early as the third year of life, allies itself with the superego to form an agency of great power in the life of the individual.
Thus the earliest object relationships produce distinct character types: an ego strong in its narcissism but socially ill-adapted; an ego that is weak, and undeveloped in all respects; or an ego that is bound to a strong superego and thus able to assert itself in the world. This last type is represented by highly religious individuals and probably constitutes the commonest form of human life.

DIFFERNCE BETWEEN EGOISM AND NARCISSISM

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