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1

As a young man, Freud harbored a strong wish to make a great discovery and thus to become famous. One such attempt involved the anesthetic properties of the drug .
2

When Freud abandoned the theory, he dramatically changed the course of psychoanalysis.
3

Freud's heavy emphasis on motivation allows for opposing explanations for the same observation.
4

Freud believed that our endowment, or inherited unconscious images, sometimes influences our behavior.
5

Unconscious images may become after being distorted, disguised, or otherwise transformed.
6

The serves the pleasure principle.
7

The superego has two parts, the and the conscience.
8

A receives sexual pleasure from inflicting pain on other people.
9

According to Freud, the two great instincts are sex and .
10

Moral anxiety results from the ego's relationship with the .
11

Defense mechanisms protect the ego against the pain of .
12

A formation is marked by the repression of one impulse and the ostentatious expression of its exact opposite.
13

The defense mechanism whereby a person redirects unwanted urges onto another person or object is called .
14

The defense that involves the repression of the sexual instinct and the substitution of cultural or social accomplishments is called .
15

The infantile stage is divided into three substages: oral, , and phallic.
16

According to Freud, the stage may lead to compulsive neatness, obstinacy, and miserliness in some people.
17

Freud believed that differences are responsible for different psychosexual development in boys and girls during the phallic stage
18

The castration complex takes the form of for girls.
19

The castration complex takes the form of for boys.
20

The proper resolution of the results in the emergence of a mature superego for boys.







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