Saturday, June 2, 2012

Comparing Freud and Erikson



Erikson published his psychosocial theories as a development on Freud's psychosexual theory  which Erikson felt placed too much emphasis on sexuality (Ruch, 1984). Psychosocial theory is basically a revision and expansion on psychosexual theory. So it is not surprising that although many perpendiculars do exist between them, there are just as many parallels. This essay will investigate both the differences and similarities of the two theories with respect to three main categories. These being  stability vs. change, biological pre-disposition (nature) vs. social/environmental conditioning (nurture) and continuity vs. dis-continuity.

Common ground.

Both theories are developmental stage theories. They assume that human development occurs in a fixed sequence of stages following a relative continuum with each developmental stage building on from the last to the next  involving increasingly more complex and more adult like behavioral patterns (Ruch, 1984).
The sequence is fixed in that people move through each stage in the same order and stages generally aren't skipped, however this is not to say that all people reach each stage at the same time or even that all people complete all the stages (Weiten, 1992).

Stability vs. Change.

 Freud suggests that the essence of our personality is established by our fifth birth day. This view of a fairly monolithic personality can be seen reflected in the fact that his development theories only refer to individuals up to the end of puberty (Weiten, 1992).

·         Oral Stage  (birth-1 year)
·         Anal Stage (1-3 years)
·         Phallic Stage (3-6 years)
·         Latency Period (6-puberty)
·         Genital Stage (puberty and onwards).    (Weiten, 1992)

It is suggested that we will carry basic personality traits with us throughout our lives. This is not to say that Freud saw the personality  to be rigidly fixed, if this were the case he would never have bothered with any of his psychoanalytical therapies, what would the point be if you couldn't rectify the problem. What is implied however is that what happens to us when we are young has a great impact on who we become later in life. Only minor changes occur throughout life mostly through our delayed solving of an unresolved stages (Ruch, 1984).

The first five of Erikson's eight psychosocial stages correspond relatively neatly to Freud's psychosexual stages in that they have similar goals.

Trust vs Mistrust \ Oral Stage
 (birth-1 year)
Concerned with the satisfaction of basic needs (suckling, affection)

Autonomy vs Doubt \ Anal Stage
(1-3 years)
 Child develops a sense of self sufficiency.

Initiative vs Guilt \ Phallic Stage
(3-6 years)
Oedipal conflict & Initiative development both grapple with the individual coming to grips with the self. 

Industry vs Inferiority \ Latency Period
(6-puberty)
Child develops same sex relationships \ learns to cope with peer group.

Identity vs Confusion \ Genital Stage
 (puberty and onwards)
Role and identity within society is realised.

 Erikson's theory covers  more ground than Freud's in that his remaining three stages span well into later life and don't come to an abrupt end during one's 20s as do Freud's (Weiten, 1992).

Intimacy vs Isolation
(20-40 years)

 vs Self-absorption
(40-65 years)

Integrity vs Despair
(65-death)

 Psychosocial theory sees the personality to be in a continual evolving state never reaching  a final point were it could be considered developed.

Nature  vs. Nurture.

Freud's theories focus on the emotionally based aspects of personality and assume that we follow a biologically predetermined cycle of five stages (Kruger, 1984). It is through these stages that the individual learns to channel his libido which is seen by Freud to be the primary driving energy of us all but is unfocused in infancy (Ruch, 1984). This sexual energy becomes more directed as one progresses through Freud's stages, hence the term psychosexual. Reproduction of the species is seen to be the primary goal of the organism and this needs to be ensured by focusing sexual drives (Kruger, 1984).

Each stage is signified by some physical action (sucking, controlling of the bowl...). These actions were seen by Freud to be sexually gratifying in that they result in physical pleasure . e.g. Suckling is sexually satisfying as well as nourishing to a child in its oral stage (Weiten, 1992).

Anything preventing this satisfaction results in frustration (Weiten, 1992). It is through this satisfaction\frustration relationship that we learn to focus our libido and ultimately cannel it outward towards possible sexual partners (we learn to repeat  what feels good) (Ruch, 1984). If  over gratification\frustration occurs one may become fixated on one particular stage preventing the moving on to the next. This desire to satisfy physical urges reinforces the nature basis of Freud's argument (Weiten, 1992).

The physical nature of the above  illustrates the strong case of biological determinisim (nature) presented by this theory in that much of it is concerned with physical predisposed urges but room is still left for outside influence. External factors can play a vital role (nurture). e.g. a parents constant reprimanding of a child sucking his thumb could cause frustration leading to a fixation on the oral stage (Weiten, 1992).

From this, one can see the dialectic relationship between nature and nurture in psychosexual theory.  i.e. The stages are biological predisposed but the outcome is subject to environmental factors too. We are born with the sexual drives but it is the development of the ego within its social context that teaches us when it is appropriate to follow them through (Ruch, 1984). How we cope with our biological drives (nature) is dependent on the socially/environmental constructed restraints (nurture) in which we experience them.

To Erikson the determining factor in personality development lay in the manner in which we handled certain situations presented to us during our individual social set  interactions. (Weiten, 1992) Erikson  termed these personal vs. social conflicts, crisis and  saw that it was our ability to work through these crisis and the repercussions that they had on us that ultimately would form our personality. Each stage (crisis) is seen to have two possible out comes (e.g,. trust vs mistrust).  How successful we are in navigating through them predicts the out come (Weiten, 1992).
Therefor Nature plays a far smaller role in psychosocial theory than it does in psychosexual theory we are shaped by our reaction to our environment. i.e. We aren't subject to some biological cycle but we are forced to learn to function within our own society and it is in learning to do so that we our selves develop. 

Continuity vs. Dis-continuity.

In psychosexual theory it is possible under certain stressful circumstances for an individual to regress back to a previous stage so that people can seem to be in a stage that they had apparently  already come through (Ruch, 1984).  This together with the possibility of an individual becoming fixated on one particular stage  points to the independent nature of each psychosexual stage (Ruch, 1984). Each being a separate entity to the previous and next. However the stages do follow on from each other in a specific order and  no stage is ever skipped, so even though there seems to be some form bidirectional continuity no true continuum actually exists.(Ruch, 1984)

 Erikson's stages assume that every individual confronts each social crisis in a universally common order and in eight stages (Weiten, 1992). There is no suggestion of regression and it is clear that we move from stage to stage taking with us any complication of the last into the next so that the psychosocial stages form a neat continuum. However problems unresolved during previous stages are carried forward to the next stage (Weiten, 1992). These problems are not permanent burdens and can be resolved at a later stage implying that Erikson's theory is not perfectly linear in that a certain degree of overlap exists between his stages.

Thus is has been shown that the two theorists have as much in common as they they do differ and that though neither of the two theorists subscribe to a 100% nature\nurture, continuum\dis-continuum or stability\change theory they  are still useful in assessing them.


Reference list
Kruger, D. (1984). A first encounter with Psychology. RSA: Academica.
Morris, D. (1971). The Human Zoo. UK: World Books.
Ruch, J. (1984). Psychology: The Personal Science. USA: Wadsworth Publishing Company.
Weiten, W. (1992). Psychology: Themes & Variations. (2nd ED.) California: Brooks/Cole Publishing Company.