Table of ContentsView AllTable of ContentsHow the Unconscious Mind WorksImpactUsesPotential PitfallsHistory
Table of ContentsView All
View All
Table of Contents
How the Unconscious Mind Works
Impact
Uses
Potential Pitfalls
History
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InSigmund Freud’spsychoanalytic theory of personality, the unconscious mind is defined as a reservoir of feelings, thoughts, urges, and memories that outside ofconscious awareness.
Within this understanding, most of the contents of the unconscious are considered unacceptable or unpleasant, such as feelings of pain, anxiety, or conflict. Freud believed that the unconscious continues to influence behavior even though people are unaware of these underlying influences.
When conceptualizing the unconscious mind, it can be helpful to compare the mind to an iceberg. Everything above the water represents conscious awareness while everything below the water represents the unconscious.
Consider how an iceberg would look if you could see it in its entirety. Only a small part of the iceberg is actually visible above the water. What you cannot see from the surface is the enormous amount of ice that makes up the bulk of the iceberg, submerged deep below in the water.
The things that represent our conscious awareness are simply “the tip of the iceberg.” The rest of the information that is outside of conscious awareness lies below the surface. While this information might not be accessible consciously, it still exerts an influence over current behavior.
The Preconscious, Conscious, and Unconscious
Impact of the Unconscious
Unconscious thoughts, beliefs, and feelings can potentially cause a number of problems including:
Freud believed that many of our feelings, desires, and emotions are repressed or held out of awareness because they are simply too threatening. Freud believed that sometimes these hidden desires and wishes make themselves known through dreams and slips of the tongue (aka “Freudian slips”).
Freud also believed that all of our basic instincts and urges were also contained in the unconscious mind. Thelife and death instincts, for example, were found in the unconscious. The life instincts, sometimes known as the sexual instincts, are those that are related to survival. The death instincts include such things as thoughts ofaggression, trauma, and danger.
Such urges are kept out of consciousness because our conscious minds often view them as unacceptable or irrational. In order to keep these urges out of awareness, Freud suggested that people utilize a number of differentdefense mechanismsto prevent them from rising to awareness.
Uses of Your Unconscious Mind
Freud believed that bringing the contents of the unconscious into awareness was important for relieving psychological distress. More recently, researchers have explored different techniques to help see how unconscious influences can impact behaviors.
Free Association
Freud believed that he could bring unconscious feelings into awareness through the use of a technique called free association. He asked patients to relax and say whatever came to mind without any consideration of how trivial, irrelevant, or embarrassing it might be.
By tracing these streams of thought, Freud believed he could uncover the contents of the unconscious mind where repressed desires and painful childhood memories existed.
Dream Interpretation
Freud also suggested that dreams were another route to the unconscious. While information from the unconscious mind may sometimes appear in dreams, he believed that it was often in a disguised form.
As such, from Freud’s point of view,dream interpretationwould require examining the literal content of a dream (known as themanifest content) to try to uncover the hidden, unconscious meaning of the dream (thelatent content).
Freud also believed that dreams were a form of wish fulfillment. Because these unconscious urges could not be expressed in waking life, he believed they find expression in dreams.
Why Do We Dream?
Continuous Flash Suppression
Research has shown that people will rate certain visual displays more negatively when they are paired with a negative or less desirable “invisible” image (such as a picture of an angry face). Even though people have no conscious awareness of even seeing those negative images, exposure to them still has an effect on their behavior and choices.
The very idea of the existence of the unconscious has not been without controversy. A number of researchers have criticized the notion and dispute that there is actually an unconscious mind at all.
More recently in the field ofcognitive psychology, researchers have focused on automatic and implicit functions to describe things that were previously attributed to the unconscious. According to this approach, there are many cognitive functions that take place outside of our conscious awareness.
This research may not support Freud’s conceptualization of the unconscious mind, but it does offer evidence that things that we are not aware of consciously may still have an influence on our behaviors.
One of the major pitfalls of Freud’s work is his lack of scientific methodology in the development of his theories.Many of his ideas were based upon case studies or observations of a single individual.
History of the Unconscious
The Swiss psychiatristCarl Jungalso believed that the unconscious played an important role in shaping personality. However, he believed that there was a personal unconscious that consisted of an individual’s suppressed or forgotten memories and urges as well as what he referred to as thecollective unconscious. The collective unconscious was said to contain inherited ancestral memories common to all of humankind.
While many of Freud’s ideas have since fallen out of favor, modern psychologists continue to explore the influences of unconscious mental processes including related topics such as unconscious bias,implicit memory, implicit attitudes,priming, and nonconscious learning.
A Word From Verywell
While Sigmund Freud did not invent the concept of the unconscious mind, he did popularize it to the point that it is now largely associated with his psychoanalytic theories. The notion of the unconscious continues to play a role in modern psychology as researchers strive to understand how the mind operates outside of conscious awareness.
10 Types of Cognitive Biases
2 SourcesVerywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.Yang E, Brascamp J, Kang MS, Blake R.On the use of continuous flash suppression for the study of visual processing outside of awareness.Front Psychol. 2014;5:724. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00724Bargh JA.The modern unconscious.World Psychiatry. 2019;18(2):225-226. doi:10.1002/wps.20625
2 Sources
Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.Yang E, Brascamp J, Kang MS, Blake R.On the use of continuous flash suppression for the study of visual processing outside of awareness.Front Psychol. 2014;5:724. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00724Bargh JA.The modern unconscious.World Psychiatry. 2019;18(2):225-226. doi:10.1002/wps.20625
Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read oureditorial processto learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
Yang E, Brascamp J, Kang MS, Blake R.On the use of continuous flash suppression for the study of visual processing outside of awareness.Front Psychol. 2014;5:724. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00724Bargh JA.The modern unconscious.World Psychiatry. 2019;18(2):225-226. doi:10.1002/wps.20625
Yang E, Brascamp J, Kang MS, Blake R.On the use of continuous flash suppression for the study of visual processing outside of awareness.Front Psychol. 2014;5:724. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00724
Bargh JA.The modern unconscious.World Psychiatry. 2019;18(2):225-226. doi:10.1002/wps.20625
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