Erich Fromm's
Humanistic
Psychoanalysis Theory
Character Orientations - A relatively constant way of relating
people to things.
> 2 Types of Character Orientations
1. Nonproductive Orientations - Orientations that prevent
people from attaining positive freedom and self-realization. There
are four types of nonproductive: (1) Receptive, (2) exploitative, (3)
hoarding, (4) marketing
2. Productive Orientation - The healthiest character
orientation of all. They possess biophilia, a love for life, and all that
is alive.
Personality Disorders - Resulted from failure to possess biophilia.
Three severe disorders: (1) necrophilia, (2) malignant narcissism,
(3) incestuous symbiosis.
Main drive of personality: Desire to be connected with the world.
Goal of personal development: Unity with the world.
Human Needs: Relatedness, transcendence, rootedness, sense of
identity, frame of orientation
1. Relatedness - Desire to be connected with others. Three basic
ways of relatedness: (1) submission, (2) power, (3) love.
2. Transcendence - The desire to rise above passive existence and
enter the realm of purpose and freedom. Two types of transcendence:
(1) create, (2) destroy.
3. Rootedness - The need to feel connected with the world.
4. Sense of Identity - It is the ability to separate and identify yourself
as a different existence from nature.
5. Frame of Orientation - As one gains a sense of identity, one
needs a frame of orientation, a guide of some sort, to successfully
navigate the world.
Authoritarianism - It is the tendency to connect yourself with
something or someone to get the power that the individual lacks
by sacrificing one's individuality. It involves a unified connection
with a powerful partner that can take the structure of masochism
or sadism.
Destructiveness - It is somehow similar to the mechanism of
authoritarianism but differs since it does not depend on a
relationship with another person. This mechanism seeks to
destroy other people as a means of escape.
Conformity - By surrendering their individuality and becoming
what other people want them to be, people who utilize conformity
attempt to overcome feelings of loneliness and isolation. They feel
more powerless the more they conform, and the more weak they
feel, the more they are driven to conform.
Arises from people who aren’t capable of loving, thinking,
and working productively. They cannot form a union with
others around them and fail to form love. Psychologically
unhealthy people could be described into three personality
disorders:
Necrophilia (racist, destructive, bullies who center their entire
character on death and destruction)
Malignant narcissism (self-worth is based on narcissistic
ideals of self)
Incestuous Symbiosis (Extreme dependency on their mother)
The manner of psychotherapy is to see the therapist as a
human rather than an expert. The patient should understand
that they are interacting with someone who also has human
needs and could help them in satisfying or achieving their
own. Shared communication and a well-established
relationship between the therapist and the patient are crucial.
Middle position on determinism and free choice - Individuals have
varying degrees of tendencies toward freely chosen action. Nonetheless,
people's capacity for reason allows them to actively influence their own
fate.
Both pessimistic and optimistic - Few people acquire positive
freedom and that most people rarely manage to reunite with nature or
other people. He also emphasized the weaponization of modern
capitalism as a means of isolating and deep attachment to
independence and freedom.
Teleology - People have a constant drive to achieve the frame of
orientation, which acts as a guide to their lives in the future. It is
commonly used as a road map, with directions and navigation.
Conscious -People are self-aware of what they are doing, find logical
reasons behind their actions, and visualize their future. Self-awareness
can also lead to anxiety, as people repress their basic character.
Social influences -Aspects of culture, society, and history have a huge
impact on the shaping of personality. He gave this an emphasis on his
psychotherapy as his method relies on the patient's reunion with the
world.
Similarities -Culture and history of a person heavily influence their
personality thus, similar personalities arrises.
Strength:
Fromm was able to create brilliant writings that help
explain the nature of humans, making him the most
well-received essayist of personality theorists. It
ranks high on its ability to organize data and explain
human personality. His theory is internally
consistent and is able to guide action as it
encourages people to live productively,
Weakness:
His theory falls more on philosophical categories,
making it not falsifiable and verifiable by empirical
tests. His work is not parsimonious
Harry Stack Sullivan's
Interpsychic Theory
Anxiety is any emotion that may arise from feelings of insecurity in
a social context. Sullivan also has considered that people may be
aware, and also unaware, to some extent as to why they are doing
their actions.
> Security Operations - It is an interpersonal device that
minimizes the possible anxiety one may feel.
Dynamisms - A type of energy shift that identifies a person's
interpersonal interactions. This energy transformation resulted from
one's experiences with others.
Personifications - Feelings, attitudes, and thoughts which rises
out from one’s interpersonal experiences.
Goal of personal development: Each stage of development work
hand in hand with the formation of the human personality as a whole
by means of interpersonal relationship.
Sullivan’s theory provided six stages of development that are based on
social factors rather than biological ones.
1. Infancy - Bodily contact and tenderness as the primary needs,
especially from the child’s mother.
2. Childhood - A healthy relationship with both parents and the need
for their approval and praise are the primary needs during this stage.
3. Juvenile Era - Form a relationship and connection with one’s
peers, especially with the same sex.
4. Preadolescence - Starts to form an intimate relationship with
people.
5. Early Adolescence - Development of lust and sexual satisfaction
into one’s interpersonal relationship.
6. Late Adolescence - Discovering the world around you and the self
is the primary need in this stage and to stabilize all aspects of social,
cultural, and economic factors.
Sublimation - Sullivan's concept of sublimation is similar to the
concept of Freud's sublimation, where both focus on positively
releasing unwanted impulses. However, Sullivan emphasized
releasing these inappropriate impulses in improving interpersonal
behavior.
Selective inatp?tention - It is the inability to see a factor in a
social interaction that may result in anxiety. It is a powerful and
possibly dangerous mechanism that could prevent us from
seeing what is happening in our surroundings and affect our
capacity for dealing with it.
“as if” behavior - It is somehow similar to Adler's safeguarding
tendency of excuses. Behavior is the act of performing a
constructed but useful role. To meet the expectations of others, a
person may behave "as if" they are stupid, even though they are
not.
Abnormal behaviors stem from the social environment of an
individual and their interpersonal relationships with
people. Sullivan also believed that every single one of us
possesses psychological deficiencies but not to a certain
degree compared to psychiatric patients.
Psychotheraphy involves working on a patient’s difficulties in
forming a relationship with others and their inability to relate to
people. Sullivan encourages face-to-face relationships with his
patients to resolve anxieties and improve communication with
others.
Determinism - Although Sullivan did not explicitly identify whether his
theory is determinism or free choice, his beliefs imply that a person's
personality relies on the relationship they have with their parent. The
childhood experiences and relationships established with a parent
determine a child's dynamism.
Either optimism or pessimism - The first flow of energy of a child is
during the nursing period with their mother. If the child is nursed, it will
lead to the satisfaction of the child and behave obediently. Meanwhile, if
the child is neglected early on, they develop derogatory self-dynamism
towards others and the self.
Causality - Parent and child relationship is crucial for the personality's
development. He introduced the concept of parataxic experience
wherein it determines the causal relationships between related
occurrences.
Both conscious and unconscious - The motives and behaviors of an
individual may be unconscious to some. However, in their relationship
with other people, humans are aware of their actions and the reasons
underlying them.
Social -The first social relationship with a parent is a significant element
in their interpersonal relationship, If established correctly, they can
develop various social relationships with other people that also influence
their interpersonal relationship.
Uniqueness - Each individual has unique experiences with their
interpersonal relationships and perception of them. These experiences
are responsible for their personality and behavior as a child and an
adult.
Strength:
Sullivan’s theories rank high on scientific and
empirical validation. Although no scientific
background, Sullivan was able to create a theory
based on a scientific approach. He had a great
contribution to psychopathology with his works
discussing the causes and treatments of
Schizophrenia. Sullivan and his theory is recognized
as the first comprehensive personality theory in
America
Weakness:
The theory lacks operational definitions and is not
internally consistent. Not parsimonious.
Henry Murray's
Personology Theory
Proceeding - Patterns of behavior that have clear beginnings and
endings.
Need - It is a construct that organizes one’s perception,
understanding, and behavior.
> These needs include dominance, deference, autonomy,
aggression, abasement, sex, sentience, exhibition, play, affiliation,
rejection, succorance, nurturance, infavoidance, defendance,
counteraction, harm avoidance, order, and understanding.
Goal of personal development: Allow our personality to be
spontaneous and flexible, and to each stage are are crucial in
strengthening both ego and superego.
Stages of Development: Murray describes these stages as
something every one of us experiences at some point and leaves a
mark on the development of our personality in the form of complexes
that stems from our unconscious. These five stages are the following:
claustral, oral, anal, urethral, genital.
1. Claustral Stage - When we are in the womb, we feel secure, warm,
and protected against the chaos of the world. People with complexes
like this grow up too dependent on others and avoid any
circumstances they deem unsafe. They feel unsafe, helpless, and
secure when they don't develop this complex.
2. Oral Stage - Consists of oral aggression (aggressive behaviors,
biting, sucking, hunger for affection and love) and oral rejection
(starvation, avoidance of dependency, vomiting, and seclusion from
others)
3. Anal Stage - Anal rejection (destruction and disorganization) and
Anal retention (excessive cleanliness and orderliness)
4. Urethral Stage - People have unrealistic goals and disoriented self-
views.
5. Genital/Castration Stage - Stems from fear of the penis being cut
off could lead to their concern about masturbation and punishment
from their parents.
Henry Murray did not develop any defense mechanism. Arises when there is an imbalance between the id and
superego, similar to Fred’s theory. An id-dominated person is
impulsive and lives a life doing crimes. Murray also theorized
that abnormal behavior is caused when one is fixated on a
single development stage and is not able to grow beyond it.
This prevents the development of the ego and superego.
Murray did not use the same psychoanalytic as other
theorists, instead use tests such as the Thematic
Apperception test to assess unconscious thoughts, feelings,
and fears.
Free choice - Murray believed a person has their freedom to modify
their personality and behavior according to their need. Their free choice
to change their behavior makes an unsatisfiable situation to have an
increase in satisfaction.
Optimism - People are capable of change to satisfy their need to have
a successful proceeding, serial, serial program, ordination, and
schedules.
Both causality and teleology - Both past events and future goals are
important in forming a person's personality.
Conscious -A person is conscious of their motivations and needs. They
are aware that their needs are to be satisfied, according to their
hierarchy of needs.
Biological - Personality is influenced by brain functions. Therefore, it is
the anatomical source of personality. The physiology of the brain and
personality have a significant relationship.
Uniqueness - Each individual has their own set of a hierarchy of needs,
depending on the intensity and strength of the need. With this, it claims
that there are differences in the needs of an individual, making them
unique in their own ways.
Strength:
Murray’s theory generates an amount of research,
specifically with this psychogenetic needs. Murray’s
work has a huge impact on further developing
psychological tests to assess personality.
Weakness:
His theory is complex and lacks parsimony.