Feist−Feist: Theories of
Personality, Seventh
Edition
II. Psychodynamic
Theories
- Erikson: Post−Freudian
Theory
© The McGraw−Hill^257
Companies, 2009
people to give, they learn to trust or mistrust other people, thus setting up the basic
psychosocial crisisof infancy, namely, basic trust versus basic mistrust.
Basic Trust Versus Basic Mistrust
Infants’ most significant interpersonal relations are with their primary caregiver, or-
dinarily their mother. If they realize that their mother will provide food regularly,
then they begin to learn basic trust;if they consistently hear the pleasant, rhythmic
voice of their mother, then they develop more basic trust; if they can rely on an ex-
citing visual environment, then they solidify basic trust even more. In other words,
if their pattern of accepting things corresponds with culture’s way of giving things,
then infants learn basic trust. In contrast, they learn basic mistrustif they find no cor-
respondence between their oral-sensory needs and their environment.
Basic trust is ordinarily syntonic, and basic mistrust, dystonic. Nevertheless,
infants must develop both attitudes. Too much trust makes them gullible and
Chapter 9 Erikson: Post-Freudian Theory 251
FIGURE 9.2 Erikson’s Eight Stages of Development with Their Appropriate Basic
Strengths and Psychosocial Crises.
Reprinted from The Life Cycle Completed: A Reviewby Erik H. Erikson, by permission of W. W. Norton & Company,
Inc. Copyright © 1982 by Rikan Enterprises, Ltd.
H
Parts
A
Old age
8
Adulthood
7
Young
adulthood
6
Adolescence
5
School age
4
Play age
3
Early
childhood
2
Infancy
1
Stage BCDEFG
HOPE
Basic trust vs.
basic mistrust
WISDOM
Integrity vs.
despair,
disgust
CARE
Generativity
vs. stagnation
LOVE
Intimacy vs.
isolation
FIDELITY
Identity vs.
identity
confusion
COMPETENCE
Industry vs.
inferiority
PURPOSE
Initiative
vs. guilt
WILL
Autonomy vs.
shame, doubt