Integrated Theories to CrimeStudent’s NameInstitutional AffiliationIntegrated Theories to CrimesQuestion 1 - Discuss a psychological theory (such as psychodynamic theory, psychopathy, or homicide adaptation) and how we can use it today to help understand behavior.In the second half of the nineteenth century, when psychology was singled out as a separate science, its primary goal was to reveal the essential elements of the human mind by introspection in the laboratory. Freud was the first to depict the mind as a battlefield between irreconcilable instincts, reason, and cognizance. His psychoanalytic theory serves as an example of a psychodynamic approach. The idea of dynamics in his theory infers that human behavior is entirely deterministic, and oblivious mental procedures are of great importance in the regulation of human behavior (Winfree & Abadinsky, 2016). The idea of the oblivious has turned into the basis of the psychoanalytic position. Z. Freud recommended that each person has thoughts that reflect such wants and aspirations, about the presence of which he does not have an inkling. These ideas, as it were, don't reach the awareness of man. The field of the