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Sigmund Freud's Theory Of Natural Selection

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Natural selection is a key concept of evolution, also it is a very important source of revolutionary change and given all this competition for resources traits that affect individual’s fitness, can lead to variations in their survival. Freud is telling how life is hard.
Darwin was able to study all kinds of organisms, he studied fossil, rocks, earth, and animal, he observed more than a dozen fishes in Galapagos islands it is located off the coast of south America all of those fish species were quite similar to mainland finch species, finches increased fitness for their environment relative ability to survive, but I know most people know each island had different size, food, and shape, all these superior traits led Darwin to another idea of reflection and also Darwin had begun to start to understand the process of selection because he had spent his life obsessed with observing nature.
The organisms can look like to be nearly ideally shaped to develop their survival and reproduction in specific environments. To Darwin, the idea of natural selection has become the central effects of adaptation and relative fitness. Darwin observations that population can often have way more offspring than …show more content…

Freud was obsessed with the fact that we all have the dynamic unconscious controlling us and he came up with this theory called psychoanalysis in which he said that the dynamic unconscious tries to control our conscious and theory. Freud tried to get people to talk about mind, things like dream to bring out the unconscious, which is contained to I’d, ego, and superego; I’d is a basic need, ego is other needs and superego is the way to act. Freud a is psychological theory lead the study of mind and he developed the talking cure to help mentally people recover and to him, our minds are in the unconscious, which means we not aware of everything at all, but preconscious which means that it is what we aware

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