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Words: | Submitted: Fri Aug 15 2003
... on the role of instinctual of unconscious motivation was viewed as radical in the early decades of this centaury; this is when his theory was noticed. According to Freud, development was governed by unconscious drives and instincts. Freud had stressed the role of biological influences and how the biological influences and how did the biological based drives, E.G. sex, aggression and hunger were shaped by encounters of the environment, and mostly with other family members. Freud believed the structure of developing personality consisted the three interrelated parts the, Id, ego, and the superego. The role of these three aspects of personality plays with changes across the development of the infant, who is largely under control of instinctual drives, which gradually becomes more rational and reality- bound. The infant is guided by the id, which is the instinctual component of the personality which operates the pleasure principle is oriented toward maximizing pleasure ...
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