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13 - Joe Griffin Media Ministries
13 - Joe Griffin Media Ministries

... These variables render him receptive to antidemocratic propaganda. (pp. 156-57) Authoritarian submission was conceived of as a very general attitude that would be evoked in relation to a variety of authority figures—parents, older people, leaders, supernatural power, and so forth. The attempt was ma ...
PowerPoint 프레젠테이션
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... 2) Cultural differences in social categories -social categories: social role, attitudes towards people etc. 3) Cultural differences in rules of social behavior -ways of defining and attributing importance to social relations, ways of establishing and maintaining social relations etc. ...
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... not limited to groups regarded as extremist (Appelbaum, 236). Many Americans are ethnocentric and see totalitarian governments as absolutely wrong. What a person sees as deviant can be very different from another. For example , “Americans see drinking as a part of our culture” (Lender and Martin, 19 ...
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Reports of the National Center for Science Education. 25(3-4): 31
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... romantic exclusivity, humans do it, plants do it, etc.) • Marriage (A): A transaction and resulting contract in which a woman and a man are recognized by society as having a continuing claim to the right of sexual access to one another, and in which the woman involved is eligible to have children • ...
by Amitai Etzioni However, this principle is not desirable from
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... person,a well ordered bundle of self-directedurges,expressedin the actot's preferences.The actor is viewed as an autonomousindividual, acting on his or her own, the well known homoeconomicus. What concept of human nature emerges from the deontological position? First of all, a view of the person as ...
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Familialism

Familialism is an ideology that promotes the family of the Western tradition as an institution. Familialism views the nuclear family of one father, one mother, and their child or children as the central and primary social unit of human ordering and the principal unit of a functioning society and civilization. Accordingly, this unit is also the basis of a multi-generational extended family, which is embedded in socially as well as genetically inter-related communities, nations, etc., and ultimately in the whole human family past, present and future.Familialism advocates Western ""family values"" and usually opposes other social forms and models that are chosen as alternatives (i.e. single-parent, polygamy, LGBT parenting, etc.). A typical trait of familialism is the insistence that normality resides in the patriarchal nuclear family.Familialism is usually considered conservative or reactionary by its critics who argue that it is limited, outmoded and unproductive in modern Western society. As a social construct imposed on non-Western cultures, it has been criticized as being destructive. Its prevalence in psychoanalysis has been criticized, and its antagonistic relationship with LGBT culture has been noted.
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