Erikson's Theory of Psychosocial Development
Erikson's Theory
Considered a psychodynamic theory; posits that personality development is determined by the interaction of an internal maturational plan and external societal demands. Argues that there are eight stages in the human life cycle and that the order of the stages is biologically fixed.
epigenetic principle
In Erikson's theory, the idea that each psychosocial strength has its own special period of particular importance
intimacy vs. isolation
Young adulthood; involves committing to another person in a loving relationship
identity vs. identity confusion
Adolescence; involves developing a lasting, integrated sense of self
generativity vs. stagnation
Middle adulthood; involves contributing to younger people through child-rearing, child care, or other productive work
autonomy vs. shame
1 to 3 years; involves realizing that one is an independent person who can make decisions and feel doubt
initiative vs. guilt
3 to 6 years; involves developing the ability to try new things and and to handle failure
industry vs. inferiority
6 years to adolescence; involves learning basic skills and working with others
basic trust vs. mistrust
Birth to 1 year; involves developing a sense that the world is safe and a good place
Integrity vs. despair
Late life; involves viewing one's life as satisfactory and worth living