Theories of Personality 9th Edition

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Chapter 7 Erikson: Post-Freudian Theory 217

As Erikson himself aged, he became less optimistic about old age, and he
and his wife began to describe a ninth stage—a period of very old age when
physical and mental infirmities rob people of their generative abilities and
reduce them to waiting for death. Joan, especially, was interested in this ninth
stage as she watched her husband’s health rapidly deteriorate during the last
few years of his life. Unfortunately, Joan herself died before she could complete
this ninth stage.


Summary of the Life Cycle

Erikson’s cycle of life is summarized in Table 7.1. Each of the eight stages is
characterized by a psychosocial crisis. The psychosocial crisis is stimulated by a
conflict between the predominating syntonic element and its antithetical dystonic
element. From this conflict emerges a basic strength, or ego quality. Each basic
strength has an underlying antipathy that becomes the core pathology of that stage.
Humans have an ever-increasing radius of significant relations, beginning with the
maternal person in infancy and ending with an identification with all humanity
during old age.


Wisdom

Care

Love

Fidelity

Competence

Purpose

Will

Hope

Disdain

Rejectivity

Exclusivity

Role repudiation

Inertia

Inhibition

Compulsion

Withdrawal

TABLE 7.1

Summary of Erikson’s Eight Stages of the Life Cycle

Psychosocial Basic Core
Stage Crisis Strength Pathology
8
Old age
7
Adulthood
6
Young
adulthood
5
Adolescence

4
School age
3
Play age
2
Early childhood
1
Infancy

Integrity vs.
despair
Generativity vs.
stagnation
Intimacy vs.
isolation

Identity vs.
identity
confusion
Industry vs.
inferiority
Initiative vs.
guilt
Autonomy vs.
shame, doubt
Basic trust vs.
basic mistrust
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