1/35
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
Id
The unconscious part of personality representing instinctual drives, operating on the pleasure principle.
Ego
The conscious part that mediates between the id and reality, operating on the reality principle.
Superego
The part of personality that represents internalized moral values and social rules, producing feelings of guilt or pride.
Defence Mechanisms
Unconscious strategies used by the ego to reduce anxiety by distorting reality.
Repression
The pushing of unacceptable thoughts or memories into the unconscious.
Denial
Refusal to accept a painful or threatening reality.
Projection
Attributing one's own unacceptable feelings or impulses to others.
Displacement
Redirecting emotional impulses from the original source to a safer target.
Rationalization
Creating logical explanations for behavior to avoid guilt or anxiety.
Reaction Formation
Transforming an unacceptable impulse into its opposite behavior.
Regression
Returning to earlier, more childish patterns of behavior under stress.
Sublimation
Transforming unacceptable impulses into socially acceptable activities.
Intellectualization
Dealing with emotional situations through abstract or logical reasoning.
Compensation
Developing strengths in one area to make up for weaknesses in another.
Identification
Adopting the traits or behaviors of another individual to reduce anxiety.
Undoing
Symbolically canceling unacceptable actions through corrective behavior.
Psychosexual Stages
Stages of personality development focusing on different parts of the body, influencing adult personality.
Oral Stage
The first stage (0–1 years), where pleasure is derived from feeding, potentially leading to dependence.
Anal Stage
The second stage (1–3 years), focusing on control and toilet training, potentially leading to orderliness.
Phallic Stage
The third stage (3–6 years), where gender identity and moral awareness develop.
Latency Stage
The fourth stage (6–puberty) characterized by dormant sexual energy and focus on social development.
Genital Stage
The final stage (puberty onward) focusing on mature sexuality and adult relationships.
Dualism
Descartes' theory that reality consists of two distinct substances: mind and body.
Mind (res cogitans)
The non-physical substance responsible for thinking and consciousness.
Body (res extensa)
The physical substance that occupies space and follows mechanical laws.
Rationalism
The belief that reason is the primary source of knowledge, more reliable than sensory experience.
Cogito ergo sum
Descartes' conclusion that the act of thinking confirms one's existence.
Ideal Society
Plato’s vision of a society divided into classes that correspond to parts of the human soul.
Theory of Forms
Plato's distinction between the imperfect physical world and the perfect world of Forms.
Allegory of the Cave
Plato's metaphor illustrating the difference between illusion and truth, and the process of education.
Four Idols of the Mind
Bacon's sources of error in human thinking: Tribe, Cave, Marketplace, Theatre.
Empiricism
The theory that knowledge is derived from sensory experience and observation.
Induction
Reasoning from specific observations to form general laws.
Deduction
Reasoning from general principles to specific conclusions.
Natural Selection
The process where advantageous traits become more common within a population over time.
Morality (Evolutionary view)
Darwin's view that morality evolved as a product of social instincts improving survival.