Unconscious Force While you are suffering from your brain, while trying to announce a paper statement, answer a mathematical question, or to answer the title of your new poetry for a while I experienced. It took countless hours to finish the place you started - zero. You noticed that your brain is beginning to suffer from over thinking, and you decide to remove your thought from the trouble. You concentrate on something else, maybe to get some R & R and suddenly ... AHA.
Around 100 years ago, Freud (1914) proposed an unconscious mind force, since then an unconscious or automated process has played an important role in most human thoughts and actions (eg Bargh, 1994). . Likewise, many researchers have turned their attention to unconscious processes. A series of studies on unconscious processes may seem to reveal implicit self-esteem. Implicit self-esteem refers to your unconscious evaluation and those closely related to yourself (Greenwald & Banaji, 1995). The implicit self-esteem seems to be different from the obvious self-esteem, or the extent to which one person believes explicitly with confidence that one is worthworthy and worthwhile. In addition, these unconscious self-assessments and assessments of self-related objects are only moderately related to explicit self-assessment and self-esteem (eg, Bosson, Swann, and Pennebaker, 2000).
After Freud's dream work, he wrote a series of papers exploring the effects of unconscious thought processes on every aspect of human behavior. He said that the most powerful of the unconscious powers that cause neurosis (mental disorder) is the sexual desire of an infant who is excluded from conscious consciousness but retains their powerful power in personality recognizing. In three papers on gender theory (1905), he mentioned controversial views on the initial experience of sex, the first violent protest action, but almost all psychologists gradually accepted It was done. Science field of research)