A challenging but fascinating topic on the way to achieving self-knowledge is the unconscious. For well over a century, psychologists, philosophers, and many others have posited a level of mentality that is not immediately open to introspection; some would even say that certain unconscious elements cannot be known through introspection. This course will examine some of the most influential ideas about the unconscious starting with the work of Sigmund Freud, and follow the development of theories of the unconscious all the way to present research in experimental psychology. But be warned: some of the things you may learn about your unconscious mind may be surprising, and possibly even disturbing!
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This course was created by a partnership between The University of Edinburgh and Humility & Conviction and Public Life Project, an engaged research project based at the University of Connecticut and funded by a generous grant from the John Templeton Foundation.
Learners can apply for Financial Aid directly with Coursera to assist with the cost of accessing the full course and gaining a certificate for successfully completing the course.
Here you will get an overview of this course, including the topics covered and questions addressed, as well as what you need complete the course.
What's included
3 readings1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
3 readings•Total 10 minutes
About this course•5 minutes
Course assessments and exercises•5 minutes
Optional companion book•0 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Get to know your classmates•10 minutes
The Freudian Unconscious
Module 2•4 hours to complete
Module details
In this first week of the course we will acquaint ourselves with the ideas of Sigmund Freud, who is probably the most famous advocate and practitioner of psychoanalysis. Shockingly for his time, Freud proposed that many facts of human behavior, including the mistakes we make, what we dream, as well as much behavior that seems on the surface to be irrational, are to be explained as being due to forces in our minds of which we are not conscious. We will look at Freud's reasons for this hypothesis and consider whether those reasons are compelling.
'What Freudian Slips Really Reveal about Your Mind'•5 minutes
Why You Keep Dreaming You Forgot Your Pants•5 minutes
Freud's Civilisation and its Discontents•5 minutes
Revonsuo's theory of dreaming•5 minutes
Freud's General Introduction to Psychoanalysis•5 minutes
5 assignments•Total 65 minutes
Practice Quiz #1•30 minutes
Practice Quiz #2•5 minutes
Initial thoughts: Your unconscious•10 minutes
Creating civilisation anew•10 minutes
Module 1 Quiz•10 minutes
5 discussion prompts•Total 75 minutes
Have you made a Freudian slip?•15 minutes
Listen to Freud speak!•15 minutes
Puppets of our feelings•15 minutes
Dreamboard app•15 minutes
Share your dreams•15 minutes
Freud's legacy
Module 3•3 hours to complete
Module details
In this second week of the course we explore some developments in psychoanalytic theory that were dominant in the middle of the 20th Century. Focusing on the work of Anna Freud (Sigmund Freud's youngest daughter) and Melanie Klein, we will consider some psychoanalytic themes that emerged after Sigmund's death. Both of A. Freud and Klein were intensely interested in the psychological development of children, and we will learn about some of their ideas on this topic. Also, we will consider some phenomena that have potential resonance for our daily lives such as transference, reaction-formation, and what is now termed "gaslighting".
Introjecting, projecting, and gaslighting•10 minutes
Meditative Moment•2 minutes
The best defence•7 minutes
Summary•3 minutes
8 readings•Total 45 minutes
Anna Freud and child psychoanalysis•5 minutes
More on Projection•5 minutes
A story of gaslighting•5 minutes
'Homophobic? Maybe You’re Gay'•10 minutes
Is catharsis really a thing?•5 minutes
Empirical study of reaction-formation and other defense mechanisms•5 minutes
5 Signs that you're dealing with a passive-aggressive person•5 minutes
Object-Relations Theory•5 minutes
5 assignments•Total 40 minutes
Practice Quiz 1•5 minutes
Practice Quiz 2•5 minutes
Initial thoughts: "In denial"•10 minutes
Witnessing defence mechanisms•10 minutes
Module 2 Quiz•10 minutes
4 discussion prompts•Total 55 minutes
Defense mechanisms in your experience•15 minutes
Gaslighting in your experience?•10 minutes
'She's got issues' by the Offspring•15 minutes
Humor as a defense mechanism•15 minutes
The Adaptive Unconscious
Module 4•4 hours to complete
Module details
Much of the last three decades of research related to the unconscious mind has focused on its automatic character, and draws attention to the vast extent of cognitive and affective processing that occur with little or no conscious effort. Such processing is thought to have been evolutionarily adaptive in the past, as well as to simplify our daily lives even now. But these processes can also be hard to modify if they are not working for us, and may account for certain biases that seem to perpetuate some current forms of injustice in many of the world's societies. In this third week of the course we will learn about the "adaptive unconscious", paying attention both to the benefits it confers and the challenges it raises.
Proprioception and other automatic marvels•13 minutes
A snowball on top of the iceberg?•4 minutes
Meditative Moment•2 minutes
Tests for the adaptive unconscious•5 minutes
The psychological immune system•8 minutes
Implicit bias•6 minutes
Durability bias•5 minutes
Meditative Moment•2 minutes
Conscious will•5 minutes
Decision making•5 minutes
7 readings•Total 55 minutes
'The Adaptive Unconscious' by M. Green•5 minutes
BBC documentary on Ian Waterman•5 minutes
'We don't know our own strength'•5 minutes
'Consciousness, introspection, and the adaptive unconscious'•5 minutes
Take the Implicit Association Text•20 minutes
The Implicit Association Test Challenged•5 minutes
Miswanting (you probably do it, too)•10 minutes
5 assignments•Total 40 minutes
Practice Quiz #1•5 minutes
Practice Quiz #2•0 minutes
Initial Thoughts•10 minutes
Your personal spin doctor•15 minutes
Module 3 Quiz•10 minutes
4 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
Conscious will?•15 minutes
Your psychological immune system•15 minutes
Implicit Bias•15 minutes
What if you won the lottery?•15 minutes
Rationality and Emotions
Module 5•3 hours to complete
Module details
In this final module we will consider the relation between emotions and rationality. These are popularly thought to be at odds with one another, and many people hold that to be rational, one must keep emotions at bay. With a focus on the work of neuroscientist Antonio Damasio, we will consider reasons for thinking that one important kind of rationality could not function properly without emotions.
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Reviewed on Aug 17, 2020
Very insightful course, I really enjoyed it. It also gave a lot of extra source material that was very helpful in getting a better understanding of concepts.
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Reviewed on Aug 1, 2020
I thought that the information presented in the class was clear and easy to understand. The quizzes and discussions reinforced the learning experience.
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Reviewed on Apr 12, 2022
Nice information to understand about our mind how to take make decision making thank u for sirI enjoyed the mediative sound and bamboo breathing Thank u sir
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