Infra-humanizing others, supra-humanizing gods: The emotional
... possessing secondary emotions even more than human beings (Hypothesis 1). Alternatively, one could postulate that gods may be perceived as so distinct from animals or higher than humans that they do not even possess what humans think they share with subhuman animal species, i.e., primary emotions (H ...
... possessing secondary emotions even more than human beings (Hypothesis 1). Alternatively, one could postulate that gods may be perceived as so distinct from animals or higher than humans that they do not even possess what humans think they share with subhuman animal species, i.e., primary emotions (H ...
Siegler Chapter 5: Infancy
... adults by age 8 months and reaches full adult acuity by 6 years of age. An infant’s visual acuity can be estimated by comparing how long the baby looks at a striped pattern such as this one versus a plain gray square of the same size and overall brightness. ...
... adults by age 8 months and reaches full adult acuity by 6 years of age. An infant’s visual acuity can be estimated by comparing how long the baby looks at a striped pattern such as this one versus a plain gray square of the same size and overall brightness. ...
Knowledge Check Answers
... wrong especially in new or ambiguous situations so we conform to the group norm as we believe others are right. You may not know the answer to a question in class, but if most of the other students agree, you go along with them because you feel they are probably right. ...
... wrong especially in new or ambiguous situations so we conform to the group norm as we believe others are right. You may not know the answer to a question in class, but if most of the other students agree, you go along with them because you feel they are probably right. ...
Establishing and Maintaining Long-Term Human
... social-emotional relationships with their users. These can take on a number of embodiments: jewelry, clothing, handheld, robotic, and other non-humanoid physical or non-physical forms. In our work we have focused on the development of purely software humanoid animated agents, but the techniques desc ...
... social-emotional relationships with their users. These can take on a number of embodiments: jewelry, clothing, handheld, robotic, and other non-humanoid physical or non-physical forms. In our work we have focused on the development of purely software humanoid animated agents, but the techniques desc ...
Overheads: SPCH 8402 Fall 2000
... persons who exchange information, create meaning, and influence each other and who through this process create social reality for themselves and others and create and maintain relationships with each other. ...
... persons who exchange information, create meaning, and influence each other and who through this process create social reality for themselves and others and create and maintain relationships with each other. ...
Friendship and Befriending
... If there are significant social divisions in a society, then, not surprisingly, friendships are much more common between people in the same category as themselves. In our society friendships are more common among people of the same sex, age, ethnicity and social-class background than they are across ...
... If there are significant social divisions in a society, then, not surprisingly, friendships are much more common between people in the same category as themselves. In our society friendships are more common among people of the same sex, age, ethnicity and social-class background than they are across ...
Maslow`s Hierarchy of Needs Abraham Maslow is
... way. Such pessimism, Maslow believed, was the result of Freud's study of mentally ill people. "The study of crippled, stunted, immature, and unhealthy specimens can yield only a cripple psychology and a cripple philosophy" (Motivation and Personality). Skinner, on the other hand, studied how pigeons ...
... way. Such pessimism, Maslow believed, was the result of Freud's study of mentally ill people. "The study of crippled, stunted, immature, and unhealthy specimens can yield only a cripple psychology and a cripple philosophy" (Motivation and Personality). Skinner, on the other hand, studied how pigeons ...
General Behaviorology: The Natural Science of Human Behavior
... discipline, the domain of ignorance is to be defined precisely, and its husbanded territory is to be yielded, with careful reluctance, only to evidence–based inference. ...
... discipline, the domain of ignorance is to be defined precisely, and its husbanded territory is to be yielded, with careful reluctance, only to evidence–based inference. ...
EIPB 698A Lecture 9
... Suppose a researcher finds that familial stress (e.g., in the context of a child’s chronic illness) is negatively associated with child psychological adjustment. Although this finding may be of interest to the researcher, it may be that the effect becomes more or less robust in the presence of other ...
... Suppose a researcher finds that familial stress (e.g., in the context of a child’s chronic illness) is negatively associated with child psychological adjustment. Although this finding may be of interest to the researcher, it may be that the effect becomes more or less robust in the presence of other ...
Applying Adaptationism to Human Anger: The Recalibrational
... there is some possibility that the individual will be present to defend his or her interests. This is entirely analogous to the relative formidability (RHP) that is known to affect resource division in non-human animals. Another set of factors that set WTRs is related to the ability to defend one’s ...
... there is some possibility that the individual will be present to defend his or her interests. This is entirely analogous to the relative formidability (RHP) that is known to affect resource division in non-human animals. Another set of factors that set WTRs is related to the ability to defend one’s ...
Chapter 1 - child-development-2011
... are repetitive, cyclical patterns of behavior. 1. An infant’s State is the degree of awareness it displays to both internal and external stimulation. States include various levels of alertness, fussiness, and sleepiness. Newborns may go through periods in which they jerk their legs in a regular patt ...
... are repetitive, cyclical patterns of behavior. 1. An infant’s State is the degree of awareness it displays to both internal and external stimulation. States include various levels of alertness, fussiness, and sleepiness. Newborns may go through periods in which they jerk their legs in a regular patt ...
A Defense of Animal Moral Cognition - Carroll Collected
... however, with the available evidence, I argue that this is an accurate assessment of some animal behavior. Before my analysis begins it is important to understand the historical context in which this debate takes place. 2. Historical Account of Animal Moral Cognition This thesis begins by discussing ...
... however, with the available evidence, I argue that this is an accurate assessment of some animal behavior. Before my analysis begins it is important to understand the historical context in which this debate takes place. 2. Historical Account of Animal Moral Cognition This thesis begins by discussing ...
Empirically Socratic
... morality so far and hopes that this argument will lead to the correct kind of defense for morality (358cd). “I want to know what justice and injustice are and what power each itself has when it’s by itself in the soul. I want to leave out of account their rewards and what comes from each of them” (3 ...
... morality so far and hopes that this argument will lead to the correct kind of defense for morality (358cd). “I want to know what justice and injustice are and what power each itself has when it’s by itself in the soul. I want to leave out of account their rewards and what comes from each of them” (3 ...
Obsessive compulsive disorder: A review of possible specific
... distressing as a result of a person’s inflated sense of personal responsibility. Salkovskis defined an inflated sense of responsibility as a person’s tendency to believe that they may be pivotally responsible for causing or failing to prevent harm to themselves or others. According to this view, an ...
... distressing as a result of a person’s inflated sense of personal responsibility. Salkovskis defined an inflated sense of responsibility as a person’s tendency to believe that they may be pivotally responsible for causing or failing to prevent harm to themselves or others. According to this view, an ...
Social Control Theory - CJ
... The dominance of Hirschi’s social control theory also reflected its simplicity. The version he proposed was quite parsimonious in comparison to lists of inner and outer containments, and the range of phenomena that could be considered commitments to or stakes in conformity. Hirschi argued that ther ...
... The dominance of Hirschi’s social control theory also reflected its simplicity. The version he proposed was quite parsimonious in comparison to lists of inner and outer containments, and the range of phenomena that could be considered commitments to or stakes in conformity. Hirschi argued that ther ...
metamorphic others and nomadic subjects
... world, the social construction of ‘threatening migrants and alien others’ has spread to entire new sections of the world population, broadening the process of negative racialization. It has inserted a new level of fear into the social structure and has come to rely on regimes of constant surveillanc ...
... world, the social construction of ‘threatening migrants and alien others’ has spread to entire new sections of the world population, broadening the process of negative racialization. It has inserted a new level of fear into the social structure and has come to rely on regimes of constant surveillanc ...
Module 8: The Brain - Phoenix Military Academy
... ways, it’s cognition that determines what we’re feeling that is key. Schachter and Singer conducted an experiment where they chemically arousing subjects then exposing them to euphoric or irritated accomplice. Half the time they informed the subjects about the effects of the drug (the C group) and h ...
... ways, it’s cognition that determines what we’re feeling that is key. Schachter and Singer conducted an experiment where they chemically arousing subjects then exposing them to euphoric or irritated accomplice. Half the time they informed the subjects about the effects of the drug (the C group) and h ...
Every Sparrow That Falls: Understanding Animal Rights
... Ethical Treatment of Animals, provides evidence of the centrality of fellowship. Participant observation and our informants conrmed that participants take turns at the meetings, informally relating their experiences to the group. One activist related: [As] I tried to relate frustration over my dog’ ...
... Ethical Treatment of Animals, provides evidence of the centrality of fellowship. Participant observation and our informants conrmed that participants take turns at the meetings, informally relating their experiences to the group. One activist related: [As] I tried to relate frustration over my dog’ ...
COMMUNITY AND HUMAN WELL-BEING IN AN AFRICAN CULTURE
... society who saw community or society as a distraction and as something that hinders individuals from leading a life of primitive innocence, which in their thinking is the truly happy life. I shall return to this issue later on in the essay. Suffice it to say that the Cynics were not alone in holding ...
... society who saw community or society as a distraction and as something that hinders individuals from leading a life of primitive innocence, which in their thinking is the truly happy life. I shall return to this issue later on in the essay. Suffice it to say that the Cynics were not alone in holding ...
Infancy: Physical Development
... Not all parts of the body grow at the same rate. The 4 Major Principles Governing Growth 1) The CEPHALOCAUDAL PRINCIPLE states that growth follows a pattern that begins with the head and upper body parts and then proceeds to the rest of the body. 2) The PROXIMODISTAL PRINCIPLE ...
... Not all parts of the body grow at the same rate. The 4 Major Principles Governing Growth 1) The CEPHALOCAUDAL PRINCIPLE states that growth follows a pattern that begins with the head and upper body parts and then proceeds to the rest of the body. 2) The PROXIMODISTAL PRINCIPLE ...
roman-actionparse05
... intelligent technologies in health, homeland security, video game entertainment, the home, and much more. \section{Methodology} Our approach to endowing machines with a similar capability is inspired by leading psychological theories and recent neuroscientific evidence for how human brains might acc ...
... intelligent technologies in health, homeland security, video game entertainment, the home, and much more. \section{Methodology} Our approach to endowing machines with a similar capability is inspired by leading psychological theories and recent neuroscientific evidence for how human brains might acc ...
Primates, philosophers and the biological basis
... right on target: full fledged morality can evolve by building on blocks that include behavior toward kins and sympathy for other members of the group, related or not. De Waal summarizes his view of the evolution of morality in a convenient table (p. 22) where the transition from social to moral anim ...
... right on target: full fledged morality can evolve by building on blocks that include behavior toward kins and sympathy for other members of the group, related or not. De Waal summarizes his view of the evolution of morality in a convenient table (p. 22) where the transition from social to moral anim ...
Baillargeon: innate object knowledge
... such an error: when the child does not search, Piaget concludes that it lacks the underlying capacity to do so. If it is true that Piaget’s search task does not measure an infant’s competence it follows that a task more in tune with what an infant can do well might be able to detect signs of object ...
... such an error: when the child does not search, Piaget concludes that it lacks the underlying capacity to do so. If it is true that Piaget’s search task does not measure an infant’s competence it follows that a task more in tune with what an infant can do well might be able to detect signs of object ...
Human nature in the economic behavior based on the neoclassical
... This homo oeconomicus is in the first place a rational agent. To pursue the cantitativist analyses, neoclassical theory needed a man reduced to a couple of essential traits, because it was easier to work with fewer variables than with more. This agent is always behaving in a maximizing manner, has a ...
... This homo oeconomicus is in the first place a rational agent. To pursue the cantitativist analyses, neoclassical theory needed a man reduced to a couple of essential traits, because it was easier to work with fewer variables than with more. This agent is always behaving in a maximizing manner, has a ...
KKDP 6: Sources of stress (eustress and distress) including
... As shown in table 3.2, the scale included 43 life events that involve change and are therefore likely to require some level of adaptation. Each life event was assigned a numerical rating that estimates its relative impact in terms of life change units. Ratings range from a score of 100 for the life ...
... As shown in table 3.2, the scale included 43 life events that involve change and are therefore likely to require some level of adaptation. Each life event was assigned a numerical rating that estimates its relative impact in terms of life change units. Ratings range from a score of 100 for the life ...