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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 . |
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2 |  |  When Freud abandoned the theory, he dramatically changed the course of psychoanalysis. |
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3 |  |  Freud's heavy emphasis on motivation allows for opposing explanations for the same observation. |
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4 |  |  Freud believed that our endowment, or inherited unconscious images, sometimes influences our behavior. |
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5 |  |  Unconscious images may become after being distorted, disguised, or otherwise transformed. |
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6 |  |  The serves the pleasure principle. |
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7 |  |  The superego has two parts, the and the conscience. |
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8 |  |  A receives sexual pleasure from inflicting pain on other people. |
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9 |  |  According to Freud, the two great instincts are sex and . |
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10 |  |  Moral anxiety results from the ego's relationship with the . |
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11 |  |  Defense mechanisms protect the ego against the pain of . |
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12 |  |  A formation is marked by the repression of one impulse and the ostentatious expression of its exact opposite. |
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13 |  |  The defense mechanism whereby a person redirects unwanted urges onto another person or object is called . |
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14 |  |  The defense that involves the repression of the sexual instinct and the substitution of cultural or social accomplishments is called . |
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15 |  |  The infantile stage is divided into three substages: oral, , and phallic. |
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16 |  |  According to Freud, the stage may lead to compulsive neatness, obstinacy, and miserliness in some people. |
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17 |  |  Freud believed that differences are responsible for different psychosexual development in boys and girls during the phallic stage |
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18 |  |  The castration complex takes the form of for girls. |
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19 |  |  The castration complex takes the form of for boys. |
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20 |  |  The proper resolution of the results in the emergence of a mature superego for boys. |
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