identity - Institute for Research on World
... persons with a group identity through which they can identify with others based on sharing both the social location and the meanings associated with a given stratification characteristic. Intermediate social structures are more localized networks, for example, neighborhoods, associations, and organ ...
... persons with a group identity through which they can identify with others based on sharing both the social location and the meanings associated with a given stratification characteristic. Intermediate social structures are more localized networks, for example, neighborhoods, associations, and organ ...
Attitudes and the Spiritual Life-009 06-03-07
... Two is not having their needs met; the Three is being loved only for what they accomplish; the Four is a life of tragedy; the Five is being too fragile to handle life; the Six is not being able to trust; the Seven is making plans for more experiences; the Eight is attacking the world for what has be ...
... Two is not having their needs met; the Three is being loved only for what they accomplish; the Four is a life of tragedy; the Five is being too fragile to handle life; the Six is not being able to trust; the Seven is making plans for more experiences; the Eight is attacking the world for what has be ...
The Effect of Interracial Media Portrayals on
... two or more racial heritages. These multiple racial heritages allow race to be a dilemma for the development of an identity both racially and non-racially for the multiracial person (Resnicow & Ross-Grady, 1997). An important factor related to the multiracial community is the extent to which outside ...
... two or more racial heritages. These multiple racial heritages allow race to be a dilemma for the development of an identity both racially and non-racially for the multiracial person (Resnicow & Ross-Grady, 1997). An important factor related to the multiracial community is the extent to which outside ...
A Dual Process Model of Defense Against Conscious and
... conscious and unconscious death-related thoughts, respectively. When consciously thinking about death, people employ proximal defenses that deal with the problem of death in a more or less rational manner, by distorting their vulnerability (e.g., since my grandmother lived to be 99, I don't have any ...
... conscious and unconscious death-related thoughts, respectively. When consciously thinking about death, people employ proximal defenses that deal with the problem of death in a more or less rational manner, by distorting their vulnerability (e.g., since my grandmother lived to be 99, I don't have any ...
Functions of attitudes
... Any particular attitude may satisfy one or more of these functions. The most important function of any attitude can only be ascertained by considering it in relation to the person who holds it and the environment in which they operate. Consequently, what is apparently the same attitude may serve rat ...
... Any particular attitude may satisfy one or more of these functions. The most important function of any attitude can only be ascertained by considering it in relation to the person who holds it and the environment in which they operate. Consequently, what is apparently the same attitude may serve rat ...
The Study of Body Culture -
... relation, far from being hierarchical, can and will turn around at any moment, the master becoming the apprentice and the apprentice turning into master. The living body is not sufficiently described by objective or subjective understanding. It includes a third: the relational, which makes human bo ...
... relation, far from being hierarchical, can and will turn around at any moment, the master becoming the apprentice and the apprentice turning into master. The living body is not sufficiently described by objective or subjective understanding. It includes a third: the relational, which makes human bo ...
Mahayana Buddhism and Environmental Ethics
... human refashioning of the environment, it seems, has been single-mindedly directed toward the fulfillment of human desires. Human desires vis-à-vis the environment have manifested themselves in automobiles, chemicals and other industrial products and material substances, as well as in the transforma ...
... human refashioning of the environment, it seems, has been single-mindedly directed toward the fulfillment of human desires. Human desires vis-à-vis the environment have manifested themselves in automobiles, chemicals and other industrial products and material substances, as well as in the transforma ...
7 Reducing Contemporary Prejudice: Combating Explicit and
... semantic stereotypes are automatically activated, they will interfere with the colornaming response and produce longer latencies (MacLeod, 1991 ). In the second phase of this study, participants received extensive training (480 trials) in negating either skinhead or elderly stereotypic associations. ...
... semantic stereotypes are automatically activated, they will interfere with the colornaming response and produce longer latencies (MacLeod, 1991 ). In the second phase of this study, participants received extensive training (480 trials) in negating either skinhead or elderly stereotypic associations. ...
Primary Motives
... Abraham Maslow in 1954 stated that human needs tend to arrange themselves in hierarchies of prepotency. o Appearance of one need depends on the satisfaction of the other. o The physiological needs necessary for survival are at the ...
... Abraham Maslow in 1954 stated that human needs tend to arrange themselves in hierarchies of prepotency. o Appearance of one need depends on the satisfaction of the other. o The physiological needs necessary for survival are at the ...
Points of View and the reconciliation of Identity Oppositions
... provided by the social representations that circulate in that society (Duveen & Lloyd, 1986). The particular significance of certain social categories like age, gender, or class, as well as nationality, is embedded in the social interactions of the everyday life of children, that offers ‘scaffolding ...
... provided by the social representations that circulate in that society (Duveen & Lloyd, 1986). The particular significance of certain social categories like age, gender, or class, as well as nationality, is embedded in the social interactions of the everyday life of children, that offers ‘scaffolding ...
Heine - Self as Cultural Product
... appears considerably less individualistic than the US along these dimensions, although a reasonable argument could be made that Canada more closely resembles the US culturally and psychologically than any other nation. China, Japan, and Korea, although each culturally distinct from one another in m ...
... appears considerably less individualistic than the US along these dimensions, although a reasonable argument could be made that Canada more closely resembles the US culturally and psychologically than any other nation. China, Japan, and Korea, although each culturally distinct from one another in m ...
Due to the belief in common descent that is a unique
... Garcia, 1982; Parham & Helms, 1981; Ting-Toomey, 1981) and do not allow ...
... Garcia, 1982; Parham & Helms, 1981; Ting-Toomey, 1981) and do not allow ...
Gender, racial, ethnic, sexual, and class identities (1997).
... biological `facts’ of sex and incorporates them into an overall self-concept" (p. 512). Gender identity includes personal and social attributes, social relationships, interests and abilities, symbolic and stylistic behaviors, and biological/physical/material attributes. An individual’s gender identi ...
... biological `facts’ of sex and incorporates them into an overall self-concept" (p. 512). Gender identity includes personal and social attributes, social relationships, interests and abilities, symbolic and stylistic behaviors, and biological/physical/material attributes. An individual’s gender identi ...
Mental Capacity Act and Medical Decision Making Background to
... capacity to consent must be clearly determined each time a new procedure or medication is being proposed. The starting point of the process should be that all people are assumed to have capacity, as principle number 1 of the act states: “Every adult has the right to make their own decisions if they ...
... capacity to consent must be clearly determined each time a new procedure or medication is being proposed. The starting point of the process should be that all people are assumed to have capacity, as principle number 1 of the act states: “Every adult has the right to make their own decisions if they ...
Identity Formation and Moral Development in Emerging Adulthood
... It is not surprising that service engagement and related pedagogies show a variety of positive outcomes during the college years. Engaged forms of learning provide opportunities for students to explore complex issues directly—with concomitant elements of risk and potential—in a manner consist with t ...
... It is not surprising that service engagement and related pedagogies show a variety of positive outcomes during the college years. Engaged forms of learning provide opportunities for students to explore complex issues directly—with concomitant elements of risk and potential—in a manner consist with t ...
Immigration from the perspective of hosts and immigrants: Roles of
... of human attributes is part of an ensemble of essentialist beliefs. An essentialist understanding of a group implies not only that group membership is immutable, but also that members share an underlying and identity-determining essence or nature. From this perspective, beliefs about the fixedness o ...
... of human attributes is part of an ensemble of essentialist beliefs. An essentialist understanding of a group implies not only that group membership is immutable, but also that members share an underlying and identity-determining essence or nature. From this perspective, beliefs about the fixedness o ...
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
... WHY APPLY THEORY TO THE PROBLEM OF ACCESS? One might ask what difference it makes whether we can specify how researcher-participant relationships take shape and influence data collection. Is it not enough to know that some researchers gain access to data through interpersonal relationships with part ...
... WHY APPLY THEORY TO THE PROBLEM OF ACCESS? One might ask what difference it makes whether we can specify how researcher-participant relationships take shape and influence data collection. Is it not enough to know that some researchers gain access to data through interpersonal relationships with part ...
Group Dynamics and Team Worl
... Secondary Group • They are impersonal and formal groups with infrequent interactions.They show week emotions between person and are of short term nature ...
... Secondary Group • They are impersonal and formal groups with infrequent interactions.They show week emotions between person and are of short term nature ...
Community On-Line: Cybercommunity and Modernity Why do
... technologies of modernity have transformed the notion of community as face-to-face relations by introducing too many distances into everyday life. These distances, arising from mobilities make it very difficult for face-to-face community to be a social reality: families and friends are scattered aro ...
... technologies of modernity have transformed the notion of community as face-to-face relations by introducing too many distances into everyday life. These distances, arising from mobilities make it very difficult for face-to-face community to be a social reality: families and friends are scattered aro ...
COLLECTIVE IDENTITY AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
... interests flow from identities? How is collective identity different from ideology? From interest? From solidarity? To avoid overextension of the concept, we have defined collective identity as an individual’s cognitive, moral, and emotional connection with a broader community, category, practice, o ...
... interests flow from identities? How is collective identity different from ideology? From interest? From solidarity? To avoid overextension of the concept, we have defined collective identity as an individual’s cognitive, moral, and emotional connection with a broader community, category, practice, o ...
The social construction of internal and external identities of
... not by any objective measure of what constitutes fact (Hruby, 2001). Kenneth Gergen has had many books and articles published on the topic of Social Constructionism. His formulation has melded the fields of Psychology and Sociology in that he believes social inquiry is used to understand the nature ...
... not by any objective measure of what constitutes fact (Hruby, 2001). Kenneth Gergen has had many books and articles published on the topic of Social Constructionism. His formulation has melded the fields of Psychology and Sociology in that he believes social inquiry is used to understand the nature ...
making bodies
... Hence, linguistic systems are apparently insufficient and problematic for explaining the body’s living corporeality. And one of the things missing is the realisation that much of what is unseen and unthought but is still highly significant in our lives, like walking through the city or knowing where ...
... Hence, linguistic systems are apparently insufficient and problematic for explaining the body’s living corporeality. And one of the things missing is the realisation that much of what is unseen and unthought but is still highly significant in our lives, like walking through the city or knowing where ...
rajiv gandhi university of health sciences, bangalore, karnataka
... can lead to rapid falls when the self becomes invalidated in the domains that one considers important. Self esteem is the experience of one’s personal self worth. It is a mental indicator, as body temperature and blood pressure are physical indicators. But when their self esteem is very low some peo ...
... can lead to rapid falls when the self becomes invalidated in the domains that one considers important. Self esteem is the experience of one’s personal self worth. It is a mental indicator, as body temperature and blood pressure are physical indicators. But when their self esteem is very low some peo ...
Identity versus Role Confusion Stage
... • Non-Western cultures do not fit well with Kohlberg’s approach – Although justice is an important moral concept around the world, – Justice does not supercede all other moral considerations in non-Western cultures © 2009 Allyn & Bacon Publishers ...
... • Non-Western cultures do not fit well with Kohlberg’s approach – Although justice is an important moral concept around the world, – Justice does not supercede all other moral considerations in non-Western cultures © 2009 Allyn & Bacon Publishers ...
Personal identity
In philosophy, the issue of personal identity concerns several loosely related issues, in particular persistence, change, sameness, and time. Personal identity is the distinct personality of an individual and is concerned with the persisting entity particular to a given individual. The personal identity structure appears to preserve itself from the previous version in time when it is modified. It is the individual characteristics arising from personality by which a person is recognized or known.Generally, it is the unique numerical identity of persons through time. That is to say, the necessary and sufficient conditions under which a person at one time and a person at another time can be said to be the same person, persisting through time. In the modern philosophy of mind, this concept of personal identity is sometimes referred to as the diachronic problem of personal identity. The synchronic problem is grounded in the question of what features or traits characterize a given person at one time.Identity is an issue for both continental philosophy and analytic philosophy. A question in continental philosophy is in what sense can the contemporary conception of identity be maintained, while many prior propositions, postulates, and presuppositions about the world are different.