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Theories of Personality: Karen Horney

Biography

  • 1885 - 1952

  • Born near Hamburg, Germany

  • Encouraged to study medicine by her mother

  • Received her degree from University of Berlin

  • Experienced challenges of having a career and children

  • Moved to US in 1932

Neopsychoanalytic

  • Reaction to Freud

  • Humans motivated by need for security and love, not by sex and aggression

  • Influence of gender experience

  • More emphasis on social factors in influencing personality

  • Level of warmth can affect personality

Safety Need

  • Social forces in childhood, not biological forces influence personality

  • No universal stages of development

  • Childhood is dominated by need for security and freedom from fear

    • Parents foster security by treating the child with warmth and affection

    • Normality of personality development direct function of level of warmth and affection received by parents

Basic Anxiety

  • Pervasive feeling of loneliness and helplessness

  • Foundation of neurosis

  • 4 ways we protect ourselves in childhood from basic anxiety:

    • Securing love and affection

    • Being submissive

    • Attaining power

    • Withdrawing

Neurotic Needs

  • Irrational defenses against anxiety that become a permanent part of personality and that affect behavior

  • Encompass the 4 ways of protecting ourselves against anxiety

  • 10 Neurotic Needs

    • Affection and approval (gaining affection)

    • A dominant partner (submissive)

    • Power (attaining power)

    • Exploitation (attaining power)

    • Prestige (attaining power)

    • Admiration (attaining power)

    • achievement/ambition (attaining power)

    • Self-sufficiency (withdrawing)

    • Perfection (withdrawing)

    • Narrow limits to life (withdrawing)

  • 3 categories of behaviors and attitudes toward oneself and others that express a person’s needs

  • Neurotic persons are compelled to act based on one of the neurotic trends:

    • Movement toward others (compliant personality)

      • Primary Modes of Relating to Others

        • Moving toward (compliance): accepting one’s helplessness and becoming compliant

      • Basic Orientations toward Life

        • Self-effacing solution: an appeal to be loved

      • Neurotic Trends

        • Exaggerated need for affection and approval

        • Need for a dominant power

    • Movement against others (aggressive personality)

      • Primary Modes of Relating to Others

        • Moving against (hostility): rebelling and resisting others to protect one’s self from a threatening environment

      • Basic Orientations toward Life

        • Self-expansive solution: a striving for mastery

      • Neurotic Trends

        • Exaggerated need for power

        • Need to exploit others

        • Exaggerated need for social recognition/prestige

        • Exaggerated need for personal admiration

        • Exaggerated ambition for personal achievement

    • Movement away from others (detached personality)

      • Primary Modes of Relating to Others

        • Moving away (detachment): isolating one’s self to avoid involvement with others

      • Basic Orientations toward Life

        • Resignation solution: a desire to be free of others

      • Neurotic Trends

        • Need to restrict one’s self within narrow boundaries

        • Exaggerated need for self-sufficiency and independence

        • Need for perfection and unassailability

Idealized Self-Image

  • Normal People

    • Built on flexible, realistic, assessment of one’s abilities

  • Neurotic People

    • Inflexible, unrealistic, self-appraisal

  • Tyranny of the Shoulds

    • Used by neurotics to attain the idealized self

    • Deny true self and behave in terms of what we think we should be doing

  • Externalization

    • Reduce conflict caused by discrepancy between ideal and actual self

Feminine Psychology

  • Psychological theory that focuses on women’s experiences

  • Womb Envy

    • Women have a superior role in sexual life due to ability to bear and nurse children; men experience intense envy

    • Impressive achievements of men in creative fields may be seen as compensations for inability to bear children

Criticisms of Horney

  • Theory of personality not as well constructed as Freudian theory

  • Ignores roles of Sociology and Anthropology in influencing personality

  • Observations too influenced by middle class America

Contributions of Horney

  • Contribution to Feminist Psychology

  • Influence on Erikson and Maslow

  • More optimistic view of personality than Freud

  • Accounts for social factors in shaping personality

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Theories of Personality: Karen Horney

Biography

  • 1885 - 1952

  • Born near Hamburg, Germany

  • Encouraged to study medicine by her mother

  • Received her degree from University of Berlin

  • Experienced challenges of having a career and children

  • Moved to US in 1932

Neopsychoanalytic

  • Reaction to Freud

  • Humans motivated by need for security and love, not by sex and aggression

  • Influence of gender experience

  • More emphasis on social factors in influencing personality

  • Level of warmth can affect personality

Safety Need

  • Social forces in childhood, not biological forces influence personality

  • No universal stages of development

  • Childhood is dominated by need for security and freedom from fear

    • Parents foster security by treating the child with warmth and affection

    • Normality of personality development direct function of level of warmth and affection received by parents

Basic Anxiety

  • Pervasive feeling of loneliness and helplessness

  • Foundation of neurosis

  • 4 ways we protect ourselves in childhood from basic anxiety:

    • Securing love and affection

    • Being submissive

    • Attaining power

    • Withdrawing

Neurotic Needs

  • Irrational defenses against anxiety that become a permanent part of personality and that affect behavior

  • Encompass the 4 ways of protecting ourselves against anxiety

  • 10 Neurotic Needs

    • Affection and approval (gaining affection)

    • A dominant partner (submissive)

    • Power (attaining power)

    • Exploitation (attaining power)

    • Prestige (attaining power)

    • Admiration (attaining power)

    • achievement/ambition (attaining power)

    • Self-sufficiency (withdrawing)

    • Perfection (withdrawing)

    • Narrow limits to life (withdrawing)

  • 3 categories of behaviors and attitudes toward oneself and others that express a person’s needs

  • Neurotic persons are compelled to act based on one of the neurotic trends:

    • Movement toward others (compliant personality)

      • Primary Modes of Relating to Others

        • Moving toward (compliance): accepting one’s helplessness and becoming compliant

      • Basic Orientations toward Life

        • Self-effacing solution: an appeal to be loved

      • Neurotic Trends

        • Exaggerated need for affection and approval

        • Need for a dominant power

    • Movement against others (aggressive personality)

      • Primary Modes of Relating to Others

        • Moving against (hostility): rebelling and resisting others to protect one’s self from a threatening environment

      • Basic Orientations toward Life

        • Self-expansive solution: a striving for mastery

      • Neurotic Trends

        • Exaggerated need for power

        • Need to exploit others

        • Exaggerated need for social recognition/prestige

        • Exaggerated need for personal admiration

        • Exaggerated ambition for personal achievement

    • Movement away from others (detached personality)

      • Primary Modes of Relating to Others

        • Moving away (detachment): isolating one’s self to avoid involvement with others

      • Basic Orientations toward Life

        • Resignation solution: a desire to be free of others

      • Neurotic Trends

        • Need to restrict one’s self within narrow boundaries

        • Exaggerated need for self-sufficiency and independence

        • Need for perfection and unassailability

Idealized Self-Image

  • Normal People

    • Built on flexible, realistic, assessment of one’s abilities

  • Neurotic People

    • Inflexible, unrealistic, self-appraisal

  • Tyranny of the Shoulds

    • Used by neurotics to attain the idealized self

    • Deny true self and behave in terms of what we think we should be doing

  • Externalization

    • Reduce conflict caused by discrepancy between ideal and actual self

Feminine Psychology

  • Psychological theory that focuses on women’s experiences

  • Womb Envy

    • Women have a superior role in sexual life due to ability to bear and nurse children; men experience intense envy

    • Impressive achievements of men in creative fields may be seen as compensations for inability to bear children

Criticisms of Horney

  • Theory of personality not as well constructed as Freudian theory

  • Ignores roles of Sociology and Anthropology in influencing personality

  • Observations too influenced by middle class America

Contributions of Horney

  • Contribution to Feminist Psychology

  • Influence on Erikson and Maslow

  • More optimistic view of personality than Freud

  • Accounts for social factors in shaping personality