2Sigmund Freud proposed a psychodynamic theory which personality consists of the Id (responsible for instincts and pleasure seeking), the Superego (which attempts to obey rules of society and parents), and finally the Ego (which mediates between them according to the demands of reality).
10Adolf Hitler was born on Easter Sunday, April 20, 1889.
Hitler had five siblings, but one only made it passed childhood. …show more content…
But I don’t agree on he has cravings for oral-fixations. Therefore, if I had to diagnose him, I’d diagnose him with the symptoms of, narcissism, anxiety, depression, hypochondria, megalomania, hysteria, paranoid schizophrenia. But really, I’m not sure if he had such a thing, I know he showed himself as narcissistic. I do believe that the developing stages we go through at different times of life mentioned by Freud are the Id, Ego, and Superego. Hitler on the other hand had real problem with his superego, because he didn’t properly acquire the internalized ideals that we get from our parents and society. He wasn’t told to do certain things like we’re told as a kid, but he did strive for perfection but got interrupted. In conclusion, I believe before Hitler’s suicide he got to the point of being untreatable because he was constantly striving for more power, took more things more violently and obstructing what anyone had to say, he was very self-absorbed; narcissistic. You can say he was evil but I think it was more of the mental incapacities, and some personality traits he greatly lacked as a young boy, the environment wasn’t as nice as it could have been, but, he lived with a very angered