Id, Ego and Superego
Id, Ego and Superego
Id, Ego and Superego
Perhaps Freud's single most enduring and important idea was that the human psyche
(personality) has more than one aspect. Freud (1923) saw the psyche structured into three parts
(i.e. tripartite), the id, ego and superego, all developing at different stages in our lives.
The id demands immediate satisfaction and when this happens we experience pleasure, when it is
denied we experience unpleasure or pain. The id is not affected by reality, logic or the everyday
world.
On the contrary, it operates on the pleasure principle (Freud, 1920) which is the idea that every
wishful impulse should be satisfied immediately, regardless of the consequences.
The id engages in primary process thinking, which is primitive illogical, irrational, and fantasy
oriented.
Often the ego is weak relative to the head-strong id and the best the ego can do is stay on,
pointing the id in the right direction and claiming some credit at the end as if the action were its
own.
The ego has no concept of right or wrong; something is good simply if it achieves its end of
satisfying without causing harm to itself or to the id. It engages in secondary process thinking,
which is rational, realistic, and orientated towards problem solving.