Erikson – Post
Freudian Theory
Erik Erikson (a.k.a. Erik Salmonsen, a.k.a. Erik Homburger; Jew or Gentile) was,
himself, always looking for his own true identity.
Erikson was the theorist that coined the term identity crisis.
With not formal training of any kind he went on to teach and practice in the field of
mental health counseling and wrote prolifically about development and personality.
His post-Freudian theory extended Freud’s infantile development stages to
adolescence, adulthood, and old age. He suggested that at each stage a specific
psychosocial struggle or
crisis occurs that contributes to the formation of
personality. This was in contrast to the struggle being initiated by psychosexual
forces ala Freud. From adolescence on, that struggle takes the form of an
identity
crisis, a turning point in one’ life, which may either strengthen or weaken
personality.
Erikson regarded his theory as psychoanalytic but Freud may not have!
His theory emphasized the importance of the life cycle approach to personality and
placed more emphasis on social and historical influences as well.
Background
Unsure of his own identity, Erikson spent most of his life searching for the
identity of his father and his own past.
Befriended Anna Freud and was her patient
Married, four children including one with Down’s Syndrome
Did psychohistories on famous individuals including Gandhi and Hitler
Wrote Childhood and Society, a classic treatise on child development
The Ego
While Freud believed that the ego is sufficiently developed in healthy people to rein
in the id, even though its control is still tenuous and id impulses might erupt and
overwhelm the ego at any time, Erikson held that the ego is a positive force that
creates a self identity of “I”.
He defined the ego as a person’s ability to unify experiences and actions in an
adaptive manner.
He identified three interrelated aspects of ego
body ego (experiences with our body, a way of seeing the physical self as
different for other people)
ego ideal (the image we have of ourselves in comparison with an
established ideal; it is responsible for our being satisfied or not satisfied
not only with our physical self but with our entire personal identity)
ego identity (the image we have of ourselves in the variety of social roles
we play)
Society has a profound impact on the development of the child and the ego!
Stages of Psychosocial Development
Erikson believed that the ego develops throughout the various stages (8)
according to the
epigenetic principle. This principle implies a step-by-step
growth of fetal organs, one level building on another, and at a
predetermined rate in a fixed sequence.
In every stage of life there is an interaction of opposites
o
Conflict between syntonic (harmonious) elements and dystonic
(disruptive) elements
The conflict between the dystonic and syntonic elements produces an ego
quality or ego strength called
basic strength
Too little basic strength at any one stage results in a core pathology for
that stage which is usually the
opposite of the basic strength
Erikson referred to his eight stages as psychosocial stages without losing
sight of their biological underpinnings
Events at earlier stages do not cause later personality development. Ego
identity is shaped by a
multiplicity of conflicts and events - past, present,
and anticipated.
During each stage, and in particular beyond adolescence, personality is
characterized by an
identity crisis – a turning point, a
crucial period of
increased vulnerability and heightened potential
Methods
Erikson used anthropological, historical, sociological, and clinical methods
to study people
The psychohistory is the “study of individual and collective life with the
combined methods of analysis and history”
Critique
Erikson wrote artistically and found his work somewhere between science
and art
Generate Research – 4
Falsifiable – 3
Organize knowledge – 2
Guide to action – 2
Internal consistency – 4
Parsimony – 3
Free will=Determinism
Pessimistic
Causality>Teleological
Conscious=Unconscious
Social>Biological
Uniqueness