Feist−Feist: Theories of
Personality, Seventh
Edition
Back Matter Subject Index © The McGraw−Hill^631
Companies, 2009
Subject Index S-5
D
d-amphetamine, 468, 469, 470
death, 349, 365–366
dreams of, 51
instinct of Klein, 141
decay, syndrome of, 205–206
deductive reasoning, 405
defense mechanisms, 55–56
of Freud, 34–38
neurotic, 171f
normal, 171f
psychic, of Klein, 143–145
safeguarding tendencies
compared to, 84t
defensiveness, 319
defiance, 259
dehumanized victims, 498
delay of gratification, 511
democratic character structure, 294
denial, 319
depreciation, 82
depression, 499
depressive position, of
development, 142–143
desacralization, 297
despair, 153
integrity v., 262–263
destiny, 358–359
freedom and, 357–359
destructiveness, 197
determinism v. free choice, 11
Adler’s individual psychology
on, 96
Bandura’s social cognitive
theory, 507
of Erikson’s psychosocial
development stages, 271
Freud’s psychoanalysis on,
61–62
of Fromm’s humanistic
psychoanalysis, 210
of Horney’s psychoanalytic
social theory, 183–184
Jung’s analytic psychology, 132
Kelly’s personal construct
theory, 571
psychology of the individual, of
Allport, 398
reciprocal, 484f
Rotter and Mischel’s cognitive
social learning theory, 544
Skinner’s behavioral analysis, 473
trait and factor theories, of
Eysenck, Costa, &
McCrae on, 436
The Development and Application
of Social Learning
Theory: Selected Papers
(Rotter), 512
development stages, of Freud, 38–47
genital period, 46
infantile period, 38–45
latency, 45–46
maturity, 46–47
development stages, of Jung,
120–123, 121f
childhood, 121
middle life, 122
old age, 122–123
youth, 121
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders,
Fourth Edition (DSM-IV),
320, 562
diathesis-stress model, 412
dichotomy corollary, 556
choice between, 557
differences, among people, 555
Dimensions of a New Identity
(Erikson), 246
dimensions of personality, 409–415,
414 f, 416 f
Dimensions of Personality
(Eysenck), 403
discrimination
between means and ends,
294–295
operant, 451
disease, personality and, 417–418
disorganization, 320
displacement, 36, 50
dispositional theories
Allport’s psychology of
individual, 374–399
Eysenck, Costa, & McCrae trait
and factor theories,
400–437
dissociation, 221
distortion, 319
D-love, 296
dominance, 518
doubt, 253
dramatizations, 228
dreams, 463
in Adler’s individual psychology,
88–89
archetypes and, 106
big, 104, 125
earliest, 125
Freud’s analysis of, 48–52
of Jung, 101, 124–126
research on, 56–57
drives, 31–33
compulsive, 169–174
inner states, 460
of Skinner, 460
DSM-IV. See Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, Fourth
Edition
dynamic organization, 378
dynamics of personality, of Jung’s
analytic psychology,
114–115
dynamisms, 219–222, 225t
intimacy, 220
lust, 220–221
malevolence, 219–220
self-system, 221–222
dysfunctional behavior, 498–501
aggression, 500–501
depression, 499
phobias, 499–500
dystonic, 249
E
earliest dreams, 125
early adolescence, 230–232, 233t
early childhood, 252–254
early recollections (ERs), 86–88
career choice and, 90, 92
counseling outcomes and,
92–93
eating disorders, 155–156
eclectic, 375
ego, 27, 28f,29, 30f
of Erikson’s post-Freudian
theory, 246–249
-ideal, 30
inhibition and, 54–55
internalizations of Klein, 145–146
of Jung’s analytic psychology,
103–104