recovery: what helps and what hinders?
... It would be nice if a mental health center would say, “These are the services that we should be able to provide to you. We can’t because of funding. But if we could, they might actually be more helpful to your recovery process than what we do have to offer.” Because there’s something that’s ...
... It would be nice if a mental health center would say, “These are the services that we should be able to provide to you. We can’t because of funding. But if we could, they might actually be more helpful to your recovery process than what we do have to offer.” Because there’s something that’s ...
The Self - Gordon State College
... You have a “sense of self” The self is private William James said that the self is based on knowledge you have about your own experiences Surgency – You may be high or low on a trait. But is the trait important? In our culture, we are taught to view ourselves as unique and independent ...
... You have a “sense of self” The self is private William James said that the self is based on knowledge you have about your own experiences Surgency – You may be high or low on a trait. But is the trait important? In our culture, we are taught to view ourselves as unique and independent ...
Chapter 1: Studying Personality: PART 1 Assessment, Research
... Our goal here: Study how different theorists define personality (I) while studying the forces and factors that shape personality ...
... Our goal here: Study how different theorists define personality (I) while studying the forces and factors that shape personality ...
Phil 306 “EGOISM” AND “ALTRUISM”: SOME DEFINITIONS IN
... You might think that “Kantian egoism” is actually a form of combination of egoism and altruism (keeping “combination motives” in mind). And this is a possible way to look at it. But I think of “altruism” as going beyond the Kantian principle of not using others; that is a negative principle—it tel ...
... You might think that “Kantian egoism” is actually a form of combination of egoism and altruism (keeping “combination motives” in mind). And this is a possible way to look at it. But I think of “altruism” as going beyond the Kantian principle of not using others; that is a negative principle—it tel ...
Slide 1
... Value of individual is important May sacrifice community good for the sake of individual duty ...
... Value of individual is important May sacrifice community good for the sake of individual duty ...
That Asian philosophical traditions tends towards a
... cooperation in creating distinctly human goods. Again, while the political ideas of Locke and Hobbes make little sense without the supposition of an ontological atomism, they are compatible with a thoroughly relational psychological understanding of the self. In his writings on eduction Locke in par ...
... cooperation in creating distinctly human goods. Again, while the political ideas of Locke and Hobbes make little sense without the supposition of an ontological atomism, they are compatible with a thoroughly relational psychological understanding of the self. In his writings on eduction Locke in par ...
File
... through life, their needs and values change Middle school: students value conformity–trying to look the same High school: some of conformity, but they also want to look good to the opposite sex College: looks for cheap clothes After college: business attire, conformity Middle age: prestige ...
... through life, their needs and values change Middle school: students value conformity–trying to look the same High school: some of conformity, but they also want to look good to the opposite sex College: looks for cheap clothes After college: business attire, conformity Middle age: prestige ...
Part I: The Tradition of Positivism: Positivism, Sociologism and
... An acting organism • Instead of being merely an organism that responds to the play of factors on or through it, the human being is seen as an organism that has to deal with what it notes. It meets what it so notes by engaging in a process of self-indication in which it makes an object of what it no ...
... An acting organism • Instead of being merely an organism that responds to the play of factors on or through it, the human being is seen as an organism that has to deal with what it notes. It meets what it so notes by engaging in a process of self-indication in which it makes an object of what it no ...
Soc Cog Review - developmentalcognitivescience.org
... C) social comparisons. D) the self-concept. 27. In studies of children's understanding, 3-year-olds usually fail at: A) false-belief tests and therefore also fail to understand pretense. B) false-belief tests but have no difficulty understanding pretense. C) understanding pretense and therefore also ...
... C) social comparisons. D) the self-concept. 27. In studies of children's understanding, 3-year-olds usually fail at: A) false-belief tests and therefore also fail to understand pretense. B) false-belief tests but have no difficulty understanding pretense. C) understanding pretense and therefore also ...
4 Love, Power, and Justice
... 2. Religion and Morality: the Pursuit of Authentic Relationships The Being (Self) of God is the supreme value in existence and the Human Being is the supreme value in creation. Religion (religia) is the name we give to the relationship or link between these two values, God and humanity. The living e ...
... 2. Religion and Morality: the Pursuit of Authentic Relationships The Being (Self) of God is the supreme value in existence and the Human Being is the supreme value in creation. Religion (religia) is the name we give to the relationship or link between these two values, God and humanity. The living e ...
Self-Reliance or Self-Sacrifice? The Troubled Marriage of American
... late sociologist Robert Bellah noted that today’s Americans tend to approach commitments “as enhancements of the sense of individual well‐being rather than as moral imperatives.” Ralph Waldo Emerson, a Unitarian minister‐turned‐renegade, is considered by many to be America’s premier exponent of ...
... late sociologist Robert Bellah noted that today’s Americans tend to approach commitments “as enhancements of the sense of individual well‐being rather than as moral imperatives.” Ralph Waldo Emerson, a Unitarian minister‐turned‐renegade, is considered by many to be America’s premier exponent of ...
SS Chapter 6
... behavior is determined by internal causes such as personal attitudes or goals • Situational Attribution an assumption that a person’s behavior is determined by external circumstances, such as the pressure found in a situation • Fundamental Attribution Error is the tendency to assume that others act ...
... behavior is determined by internal causes such as personal attitudes or goals • Situational Attribution an assumption that a person’s behavior is determined by external circumstances, such as the pressure found in a situation • Fundamental Attribution Error is the tendency to assume that others act ...
What is Ethics?
... overlap between ethics and law, and ethics and etiquette. Much of the law embodies ethical principles: respect for basic rights to life, property, and the right of citizens to participate in political life. It’s usually unethical to break the law. A breach of etiquette can also be unethical if it is ...
... overlap between ethics and law, and ethics and etiquette. Much of the law embodies ethical principles: respect for basic rights to life, property, and the right of citizens to participate in political life. It’s usually unethical to break the law. A breach of etiquette can also be unethical if it is ...
Confucianism
... Differed from the moral and social teaching of Confucianism. Comes from the word “Tao” which means “The Way”. Developed by a man named Laozi, or “old master”. Rejected formal social structures and the idea that people must fill specific roles in a society. Instead Taoism placed importance on the ind ...
... Differed from the moral and social teaching of Confucianism. Comes from the word “Tao” which means “The Way”. Developed by a man named Laozi, or “old master”. Rejected formal social structures and the idea that people must fill specific roles in a society. Instead Taoism placed importance on the ind ...
Basic Concepts of Symbolic Interactionism
... iii. Advantages of Symbols 1. Symbols are public. a. For example, when a word is uttered, it is heard by the one using it as well as by others who participate in its meaning. 2. Symbols can be employed in the absence of the thing they signify. a. Remember that natural signs can only occur when the t ...
... iii. Advantages of Symbols 1. Symbols are public. a. For example, when a word is uttered, it is heard by the one using it as well as by others who participate in its meaning. 2. Symbols can be employed in the absence of the thing they signify. a. Remember that natural signs can only occur when the t ...
Symbolic Interactionism and Divorce
... Sociologists rely on different theoretical models to explain social interaction and human behavior. The three most dominant models in the field are the functionalist perspective, the conflict perspective and the symbolic interaction perspective. The last, also known as symbolic interactionism, guide ...
... Sociologists rely on different theoretical models to explain social interaction and human behavior. The three most dominant models in the field are the functionalist perspective, the conflict perspective and the symbolic interaction perspective. The last, also known as symbolic interactionism, guide ...
Sociology
... people. By school age, they are also anticipating the expectations of others. Through role taking Mead believed we develop our sense of self. Also – Mead said “self” consists of 2 parts “I” = your unsocialized, spontaneous personality; and “ME” your socialized self that’s aware of the expectations & ...
... people. By school age, they are also anticipating the expectations of others. Through role taking Mead believed we develop our sense of self. Also – Mead said “self” consists of 2 parts “I” = your unsocialized, spontaneous personality; and “ME” your socialized self that’s aware of the expectations & ...
Chapter 12 Development of the Self and Social Cognition
... – Origins and Development of Self-EsteemChildren's evaluation of themselves and their competencies is a most important aspect of self that can influence all aspects of their conduct and their psychological well-being. The theory predicts that securely attached children, who presumably construct a po ...
... – Origins and Development of Self-EsteemChildren's evaluation of themselves and their competencies is a most important aspect of self that can influence all aspects of their conduct and their psychological well-being. The theory predicts that securely attached children, who presumably construct a po ...
GLOSSARY Abrahamic religions The Western monotheisms
... absolute space and absolute time The view that space and time exist independently of objects and events “in” them, a view defended by Newton. In general, absolute, as used in philosophy, means “independent and nonrelative, unqualified and all-inclusive.” absolutism The thesis that there is but one c ...
... absolute space and absolute time The view that space and time exist independently of objects and events “in” them, a view defended by Newton. In general, absolute, as used in philosophy, means “independent and nonrelative, unqualified and all-inclusive.” absolutism The thesis that there is but one c ...
Ethics in conflict
... Chairman. The city must close one of the local parks for financial reasons, but there is no agreement over which one. Parks are the heart of the community – they have green spaces, community meeting places, and recreational programs for citizens, not to mention their effect on the surrounding proper ...
... Chairman. The city must close one of the local parks for financial reasons, but there is no agreement over which one. Parks are the heart of the community – they have green spaces, community meeting places, and recreational programs for citizens, not to mention their effect on the surrounding proper ...
The Socratic Method and the Christian Liberal Arts in Sociological
... symbolically, and so symbols constitute the fundamental components of any cultural system. The meanings imputed to symbols are shared or social, and comprise the primary elements with which individuals construct reality. To that end, much of human reality is socially constructed. In The Social Const ...
... symbolically, and so symbols constitute the fundamental components of any cultural system. The meanings imputed to symbols are shared or social, and comprise the primary elements with which individuals construct reality. To that end, much of human reality is socially constructed. In The Social Const ...