constraints of reality and the moral code – ограничения реальности и морального кодекса
moral conscience – моральная совесть
internalizing societal values – усвоение общественных ценностей
transgressions – нарушения
pleasure-seeking impulses – стремления к получению удовольствия
maintain equilibrium – сохранять равновесие
unconscious mental processes – бессознательные психические процессы
distort or block threatening thoughts – искажать или блокировать угрожающие мысли
unacceptable thoughts and feelings – неприемлемые мысли и чувства
Repression – Вытеснение
Projection – Проекция
Rationalization – Рационализация
possess – обладать
rival for his mother’s affections – соперник за привязанность матери
self-destruction and aggression – саморазрушение и агрессия
heir – наследник
Exercise 5
Fill in the gaps with some words or phrases from the wordlist.
1. The Id is the __________, driven by the pleasure principle.
2. The Ego balances the demands of the Id with the __________.
3. The Superego is the __________, internalizing societal values.
4. Defense mechanisms are __________, which protect the Ego from anxiety.
5. Repression is the unconscious burying of __________.
6. Projection is the attribution of one’s own __________ to others.
7. The Oedipus complex is a boy’s unconscious desire to __________ his mother.
UNIT 5
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (2011)
Key Ideas:
System 1 and System 2 Thinking
System 1:
Fast and automatic
Intuitive and emotional
Operates without conscious effort
Relies on heuristics (mental shortcuts) and biases
System 2:
Slow and deliberate
Rational and logical
Requires conscious effort
Used for complex tasks and decision-making
Cognitive Biases
Framing Effects: People’s decisions can be influenced by the way information is presented, even if the underlying facts are the same.
Confirmation Bias: People tend to seek out and interpret information that confirms their existing beliefs.
Availability Heuristic: People tend to judge the likelihood of an event based on how easily they can recall examples of it.
Prospect Theory
People evaluate gains and losses differently, with losses having a disproportionately greater impact on their decision-making.
This asymmetry leads to risk aversion for gains and risk seeking for losses.
Anchoring Effect
People tend to rely too heavily on the first piece of information they receive when making judgments.
This can lead to biased estimates and decisions.
Nudge Theory