Philosophy
Sigmund Freud enumerates that the human psyche consists of the unconscious id, the ego (which is partly conscious and partly unconscious), and the superego (also partly conscious and partly unconscious). At first, a newborn has only an id, which consists of blind drives that seek satisfaction. In a few months, the ego is developed when the newborn experiences resistance and frustration of its drives by the outside world: it realizes that it is separate from that external world and develops a sense of self. The superego will develop later, when it has internalized the rules, prohibitions and ideals of its parents. In the meantime, the ego is the infant's structure that relates with the outside world on the basis of the reality principle, whereby the developing child learns to weigh its choices according to the consequences. This it does while pursuing or fulfilling the innate pleasure principle, whereby it seeks to gratify as many of its desires as possible.
Freud believes that the infant's developing sexual drive is focused on its mother, who becomes its first love, and views the father as a competitor and thus resents him. But while it feels this way towards its father, it also loves him. Out of fear of revenge from the father, the infant represses both its desire for the mother and its resentment for the father. The ego dumps that desire and that resentment out of consciousness for good by identifying with the same-sex parent (towards the father if the infant is male, and towards the mother, if female). When it succeeds, the superego develops.
The superego is a resident controller in the psyche: it knows what is in the conscious mind and either approves or disapproves it. Knowing this, the ego strives to repress or deny from consciousness anything that...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now