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among the
id,
the
ego,
and the
super-ego
is what determines human
behavior, according to Freud.
EGO.
In psychoanalytic theory,
ego
is the part of human
personality that combines innate biological impulses (
id
) or drives with
reality to produce appropriate behavior. The
ego
is that portion of the
personality that imposes realistic limitations on such behavior. It decides
whether
id- motivated
behavior is appropriate, given the prevailing
social and environmental conditions. While the id operates on the
“pleasure principle,” the ego uses the “reality principle” to determine
whether to satisfy or delay fulfilling the id’s demands. The
ego
considers the consequences of actions to modify the powerful drives of
the
id.
A person’s own concept of what is
acceptable determines the
ego’
s decisions. The ego also must “negotiate” with the
super-ego
(conscience) in the often bitter battle between the
id
’s drives and a
person’s own sense of right and wrong. Repression and anxiety may
result when the
ego
consistently overrides the
id
’s extreme demands.
ID.
In psychoanalytic theory
id
is
considered the most primitive,
unconscious element of human personality. The
id
is the part of the per-
sonality that includes such basic biological impulses or drives as eating,
drinking, eliminating wastes, avoiding pain, attaining sexual pleasure,
and aggression. The
id
operates on the “pleasure principle,”
seeking to
satisfy these basic urges immediately with no regard to consequences.
Only when tempered through interaction with the
ego
(reality) and
super-ego
(conscience) does the
id
conform
to what is considered
socially acceptable behavior? According to Freud, anxiety is caused by
the conflict between the id’s powerful impulses and the modifying
forces of the ego and
super-ego.
The more id-driven impulses are stifled
through physical reality or societal norms, the greater the level of
anxiety. People express their anxiety in various ways, including
nervousness,
displaced aggression, and serious anxiety disorders. The
id
,
motivated by two biological drives: sex and aggression and operates
according to the pleasure principle, seeking satisfaction and avoiding
pain. Guided by the reality principle, the ego’s goal is to find safe and
socially acceptable
ways of satisfying the
id
’s desires without
transgressing the limits imposed by the
super-ego.
A healthy balance
between the more instinctual demands of the id and the moral demands
of the
super-ego
, as negotiated by the
ego
, results in a “normal” or
healthy personality.
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