McTaggart John Mitchell - MacSphere
... dichotomy between the individual and society through devotion to objective goals which lie beyond the dialectic. The author suggests that Simmel in fact reserves his highest praise for the creative genius, the individual able to tolerate, and in turn, ...
... dichotomy between the individual and society through devotion to objective goals which lie beyond the dialectic. The author suggests that Simmel in fact reserves his highest praise for the creative genius, the individual able to tolerate, and in turn, ...
The Experience of Regret
... anything differently" if they could live over again. Although such statements are offered with sincerity, they can be difficult to accept at face value. Living a life with no mistakes and without any regrets is extraordinarily hard to accomplish. A lifetime of making choices brings with it the knowl ...
... anything differently" if they could live over again. Although such statements are offered with sincerity, they can be difficult to accept at face value. Living a life with no mistakes and without any regrets is extraordinarily hard to accomplish. A lifetime of making choices brings with it the knowl ...
Old-Fashioned and Contemporary Forms of Prejudice
... Aversive Prejudice Characteristics of Aversive Prejudice • Dominant social group absorb implicit negative attitudes towards minority groups while they are growing up in American society • Reject the racialized traditional beliefs that support modernsymbolic prejudice • Strongly motivated to see them ...
... Aversive Prejudice Characteristics of Aversive Prejudice • Dominant social group absorb implicit negative attitudes towards minority groups while they are growing up in American society • Reject the racialized traditional beliefs that support modernsymbolic prejudice • Strongly motivated to see them ...
Untitled - University of Helsinki
... called “critical sociology”, on the one hand, and “sociology of critique”, on the other, has become ever more prominent. While one party to this paradigmatic division credits sociology with a professional responsibility to evaluate the social acceptability of late-capitalist society, the other one c ...
... called “critical sociology”, on the one hand, and “sociology of critique”, on the other, has become ever more prominent. While one party to this paradigmatic division credits sociology with a professional responsibility to evaluate the social acceptability of late-capitalist society, the other one c ...
poster abstracts
... heightened ability for detecting others’ negative mental states may increase this risk. The present study is the first to investigate mentalization as a moderator in the relation between personality disorder and TDV. Jessica Davis1 1Univ. of Houston ...
... heightened ability for detecting others’ negative mental states may increase this risk. The present study is the first to investigate mentalization as a moderator in the relation between personality disorder and TDV. Jessica Davis1 1Univ. of Houston ...
The (In)egalitarian Self: On the Motivated Rejection of Implicit Racial
... White Americans widely endorse egalitarian values and strongly oppose hostile forms of racial prejudice, yet significant racial disparities persist in many important life domains. Unconscious, implicit forms of bias at the individual-level have been offered as one explanation for aggregate racial di ...
... White Americans widely endorse egalitarian values and strongly oppose hostile forms of racial prejudice, yet significant racial disparities persist in many important life domains. Unconscious, implicit forms of bias at the individual-level have been offered as one explanation for aggregate racial di ...
Where the lawn mower stops
... Socially, grass, with its aesthetically pleasing color and uniform texture, fosters a sense of well-being. It provides a tough, yet soft, surface for recreation and sports. Often overlooked is the way lawns, which offer pleasant places for people to gather, contribute to people’s emotional and socio ...
... Socially, grass, with its aesthetically pleasing color and uniform texture, fosters a sense of well-being. It provides a tough, yet soft, surface for recreation and sports. Often overlooked is the way lawns, which offer pleasant places for people to gather, contribute to people’s emotional and socio ...
The ABC of Ambivalence: Affective, Behavioral
... associations can be (but not always are) relevant at the same time. Based on these two prerequisites, we make a distinction between the associative structure of ambivalence based on positive and negative association weights (objective ambivalence) and the experience of conflict due to this associati ...
... associations can be (but not always are) relevant at the same time. Based on these two prerequisites, we make a distinction between the associative structure of ambivalence based on positive and negative association weights (objective ambivalence) and the experience of conflict due to this associati ...
Dimensions of Hypocrisy 1 Hypocrisy
... Two other unresolved questions in the philosophical literature on hypocrisy concern the roles of weakness of will (May & Holton, forthcoming; Szabados & Soifer, 1999) and selfdeception. It could be argued, for example, that a person who contradicts his own expressed value for tolerance while in the ...
... Two other unresolved questions in the philosophical literature on hypocrisy concern the roles of weakness of will (May & Holton, forthcoming; Szabados & Soifer, 1999) and selfdeception. It could be argued, for example, that a person who contradicts his own expressed value for tolerance while in the ...
pan paniscus - Utrecht University Repository
... are the best coalition partners. As a consequence of this, most grooming will go up the hierarchy. As a result of this, competition will arise, leading to a monopolizatio n of high ranking individuals by the individual s ranking just below them, so that most grooming will occur among adjacent ranks ...
... are the best coalition partners. As a consequence of this, most grooming will go up the hierarchy. As a result of this, competition will arise, leading to a monopolizatio n of high ranking individuals by the individual s ranking just below them, so that most grooming will occur among adjacent ranks ...
Chapter 14
... 8) Why did the "XYY" chromosome theory fall out of favor as an explanation for criminal behavior? A) It was discovered there are no longer any XYY chromosome configurations among men. B) Most criminals do not have XYY and everyone with XYY is not a criminal. C) The work of the theorist who proposed ...
... 8) Why did the "XYY" chromosome theory fall out of favor as an explanation for criminal behavior? A) It was discovered there are no longer any XYY chromosome configurations among men. B) Most criminals do not have XYY and everyone with XYY is not a criminal. C) The work of the theorist who proposed ...
Behavioral Legal Ethics - Scholarly Commons @ UNLV Law
... found to have failed to exercise adequate diligence in representing their clients.25 Some have suggested that lawyers behave badly because they are inherently “bad”26 or “stupid,”27 because they are susceptible to undue pressure from their clients,28 because they are under-regulated,29 or even becau ...
... found to have failed to exercise adequate diligence in representing their clients.25 Some have suggested that lawyers behave badly because they are inherently “bad”26 or “stupid,”27 because they are susceptible to undue pressure from their clients,28 because they are under-regulated,29 or even becau ...
BEHAVIORAL EGAL THICS - 2016 District Court Conference
... found to have failed to exercise adequate diligence in representing their clients.25 Some have suggested that lawyers behave badly because they are inherently “bad”26 or “stupid,”27 because they are susceptible to undue pressure from their clients,28 because they are under-regulated,29 or even b ...
... found to have failed to exercise adequate diligence in representing their clients.25 Some have suggested that lawyers behave badly because they are inherently “bad”26 or “stupid,”27 because they are susceptible to undue pressure from their clients,28 because they are under-regulated,29 or even b ...
Big C, Little C, Howard, and Me: Approaches to Understanding Creativity Working Paper
... For example, as Howard notes in Creating Minds,, Albert Einstein had a “vexed relation to formal education,” exhibiting a “strong dislike of the regimentation that characterized most German schools at the time” (p. 91). In 1975, when I first read Einstein’s own writing about his life and work, I was ...
... For example, as Howard notes in Creating Minds,, Albert Einstein had a “vexed relation to formal education,” exhibiting a “strong dislike of the regimentation that characterized most German schools at the time” (p. 91). In 1975, when I first read Einstein’s own writing about his life and work, I was ...
Political Polarization Projection - University of California, Santa
... body politic may be well aware) that the two groups construe the world differently. . . . However, these same partisans may attribute such construal differences to the biasing effects on others (but not, of course, on themselves) of ideology or self-interest. In other words, individuals may feel tha ...
... body politic may be well aware) that the two groups construe the world differently. . . . However, these same partisans may attribute such construal differences to the biasing effects on others (but not, of course, on themselves) of ideology or self-interest. In other words, individuals may feel tha ...
Amour-Propre, Good and Bad - Western Political Science Association
... are free to make their own choices about how they use that space; social differentiation …is the formative condition of individual liberty.”27 Durkheim thinks that division of labor is the driving force in social differentiation, and hence the material condition necessary for individuality and henc ...
... are free to make their own choices about how they use that space; social differentiation …is the formative condition of individual liberty.”27 Durkheim thinks that division of labor is the driving force in social differentiation, and hence the material condition necessary for individuality and henc ...
Lecture 19
... – to think about death – because they no longer had to care for their own homes. Additionally, they found themselves surrounded by people in a situation similar to their own: they were basically moving into the retirement home to prepare for death. The prevalence of elderly people facilitated discus ...
... – to think about death – because they no longer had to care for their own homes. Additionally, they found themselves surrounded by people in a situation similar to their own: they were basically moving into the retirement home to prepare for death. The prevalence of elderly people facilitated discus ...
8 How to Maximize Implementation Intention Effects Peter M.
... versus nonword decisions while both neutral and critical stimuli were presented as task-irrelevant distractors. The results indicated that the presence of a critical stimulus slowed down participants' responses; however, this effect only occurred when they had formed implementation intentions, not w ...
... versus nonword decisions while both neutral and critical stimuli were presented as task-irrelevant distractors. The results indicated that the presence of a critical stimulus slowed down participants' responses; however, this effect only occurred when they had formed implementation intentions, not w ...
TPRVol59No3 SMITH
... concluded that “affective responsivity [EE] may have evolved as a mechanism for producing self-sacrificing behavior, while role-taking [CE] might have evolved to allow more successful competition with one’s primate peers” (p. 45). CE appears to be adaptive because it underpins sophisticated verbal a ...
... concluded that “affective responsivity [EE] may have evolved as a mechanism for producing self-sacrificing behavior, while role-taking [CE] might have evolved to allow more successful competition with one’s primate peers” (p. 45). CE appears to be adaptive because it underpins sophisticated verbal a ...
Is Empathy Necessary for Morality?
... empathy and morally relevant behaviors such as aggression and helping behaviors (Eisenberg et al., 2006). But what’s really at issue here is whether empathy gives rise to the capacity to make moral judgments. Studies do show that children engage in empathetic reasoning when maki ...
... empathy and morally relevant behaviors such as aggression and helping behaviors (Eisenberg et al., 2006). But what’s really at issue here is whether empathy gives rise to the capacity to make moral judgments. Studies do show that children engage in empathetic reasoning when maki ...
Psychology Colossal Crossword Puzzle
... 199. _____ stage: the psychosexual stage of development that follows resolution of the Oedipus Complex. (07 letters) 201. The extent to which psychological tests actually measure what they claim to measure. (08 letters) 203. A group of disorders characterized by severe distortions in thought and lan ...
... 199. _____ stage: the psychosexual stage of development that follows resolution of the Oedipus Complex. (07 letters) 201. The extent to which psychological tests actually measure what they claim to measure. (08 letters) 203. A group of disorders characterized by severe distortions in thought and lan ...
The Blush: Literary and Psychological Perspectives
... suggests – is responsible for sixteen of the eighteen blushes in Northanger Abbey. Yet in Emma, Harriet, also an unsophisticated teenager, who blushes whenever there is any allusion to a potential marriage partner, is no more likely to blush (eight instances) than are Jane Fairfax (nine) and Emma Wo ...
... suggests – is responsible for sixteen of the eighteen blushes in Northanger Abbey. Yet in Emma, Harriet, also an unsophisticated teenager, who blushes whenever there is any allusion to a potential marriage partner, is no more likely to blush (eight instances) than are Jane Fairfax (nine) and Emma Wo ...
Internal and External Motivation to Respond Without Prejudice
... anonymity (e.g., mass testing). This finding suggests that when expressing their level of racial prejudice, some individuals are more strongly affected by features of the social context than are others. Who are these individuals? And what does the adjustment in their attitudinal responses imply abou ...
... anonymity (e.g., mass testing). This finding suggests that when expressing their level of racial prejudice, some individuals are more strongly affected by features of the social context than are others. Who are these individuals? And what does the adjustment in their attitudinal responses imply abou ...
Internal and External Motivation to Respond Without Prejudice
... anonymity (e.g., mass testing). This finding suggests that when expressing their level of racial prejudice, some individuals are more strongly affected by features of the social context than are others. Who are these individuals? And what does the adjustment in their attitudinal responses imply abou ...
... anonymity (e.g., mass testing). This finding suggests that when expressing their level of racial prejudice, some individuals are more strongly affected by features of the social context than are others. Who are these individuals? And what does the adjustment in their attitudinal responses imply abou ...