Masterxthesis
... form or another by those interested in Ibsen’s drama and the aesthetic of the tragic genre. What seems an accomplished project in terms of understanding and completion is a matter yet seemingly debatable. The struggle to endorse and exhaust this theme about Ibsen and his relation to the tragic art h ...
... form or another by those interested in Ibsen’s drama and the aesthetic of the tragic genre. What seems an accomplished project in terms of understanding and completion is a matter yet seemingly debatable. The struggle to endorse and exhaust this theme about Ibsen and his relation to the tragic art h ...
Chapter 2 - Persuasion: Insights from the Self
... which any variable can affect attitudes: (1) serving as a simple cue, (2) as a piece of substantive evidence (i.e., an argument), (3) affecting the extent of information processing by influencing motivation or ability to think, and (4) affecting the direction of processing (i.e., introducing a bias ...
... which any variable can affect attitudes: (1) serving as a simple cue, (2) as a piece of substantive evidence (i.e., an argument), (3) affecting the extent of information processing by influencing motivation or ability to think, and (4) affecting the direction of processing (i.e., introducing a bias ...
- Heythrop College Publications
... desk likewise increased the severity of their judgments, as did asking them to make moral judgments in the presence of a bad smell.4 Further support comes from Westen’s (2007) work on political psychology. In a survey of people’s political views, their emotional responses to policies and individuals ...
... desk likewise increased the severity of their judgments, as did asking them to make moral judgments in the presence of a bad smell.4 Further support comes from Westen’s (2007) work on political psychology. In a survey of people’s political views, their emotional responses to policies and individuals ...
Expert moral intuition and its development
... desk likewise increased the severity of their judgments, as did asking them to make moral judgments in the presence of a bad smell.4 Further support comes from Westen’s (2007) work on political psychology. In a survey of people’s political views, their emotional responses to policies and individuals ...
... desk likewise increased the severity of their judgments, as did asking them to make moral judgments in the presence of a bad smell.4 Further support comes from Westen’s (2007) work on political psychology. In a survey of people’s political views, their emotional responses to policies and individuals ...
Relative Deprivation Specification, Development, and Integration
... suggest new questions for research – how are intergroup boundaries maintained and how do stratification systems define groups’ interests? Taylor draws on an important and frequently used distinction in the RD literature between egoistic (or personal) and fraternalistic (or group) RD. The former norm ...
... suggest new questions for research – how are intergroup boundaries maintained and how do stratification systems define groups’ interests? Taylor draws on an important and frequently used distinction in the RD literature between egoistic (or personal) and fraternalistic (or group) RD. The former norm ...
TAAG Brochure - The Albinism Alliance Group
... community. We’re creating a series of information pertinent to understanding living with albinism and related characteristics. TAAG envisions a larger multi-cultural resource by joining forces with other special interest grassroots organizations. The Albinism Alliance Group was formed in March of 20 ...
... community. We’re creating a series of information pertinent to understanding living with albinism and related characteristics. TAAG envisions a larger multi-cultural resource by joining forces with other special interest grassroots organizations. The Albinism Alliance Group was formed in March of 20 ...
Unconscious bias and higher education
... that merit was redefined to fit the profile of the candidate of the preferred (in this case) gender: ‘In three studies, participants assigned male and female applicants to gender-stereotypical jobs. However, they did not view male and female applicants as having different strengths and weaknesses. I ...
... that merit was redefined to fit the profile of the candidate of the preferred (in this case) gender: ‘In three studies, participants assigned male and female applicants to gender-stereotypical jobs. However, they did not view male and female applicants as having different strengths and weaknesses. I ...
Dissertation_EMC
... failure of recognizing overarching human commonalities, and the failure to recognize within group variation all risk the devastating consequences of dehumanizing those who are served” (p. ...
... failure of recognizing overarching human commonalities, and the failure to recognize within group variation all risk the devastating consequences of dehumanizing those who are served” (p. ...
Unconscious bias and higher education
... that merit was redefined to fit the profile of the candidate of the preferred (in this case) gender: ‘In three studies, participants assigned male and female applicants to gender-stereotypical jobs. However, they did not view male and female applicants as having different strengths and weaknesses. I ...
... that merit was redefined to fit the profile of the candidate of the preferred (in this case) gender: ‘In three studies, participants assigned male and female applicants to gender-stereotypical jobs. However, they did not view male and female applicants as having different strengths and weaknesses. I ...
Psychological Bulletin - Berkeley-Haas
... with his outstanding qualities; he must use these abilities for their benefit” (p. 162). The willingness to help is important to the process of status affordance because, again, status inherently a social exchange. People will voluntarily confer status to someone only if there is the possibility of ...
... with his outstanding qualities; he must use these abilities for their benefit” (p. 162). The willingness to help is important to the process of status affordance because, again, status inherently a social exchange. People will voluntarily confer status to someone only if there is the possibility of ...
the appropriation of social science knowledge by `lay people`
... Bourgeois Gentilhomme was speaking in prose without knowing it, we all routinely, without necessarily being aware of it, 'use' notions and ideas derived from social science in order to make sense of our day-to-day lives. That 'lay people', whose voice Tiffany's comment above is supposed to illustrat ...
... Bourgeois Gentilhomme was speaking in prose without knowing it, we all routinely, without necessarily being aware of it, 'use' notions and ideas derived from social science in order to make sense of our day-to-day lives. That 'lay people', whose voice Tiffany's comment above is supposed to illustrat ...
A MONOLOGUE ON SHAME - Michigan State University
... and manifest content, that is, to Else‘s conscious, preconscious, and unconscious thoughts. Insight into her mental data exposes psychical conflict and uncovers sexual desire. For Else, this desire translates into shame due to her internalization of the social code of Vienna, which denies her sexual ...
... and manifest content, that is, to Else‘s conscious, preconscious, and unconscious thoughts. Insight into her mental data exposes psychical conflict and uncovers sexual desire. For Else, this desire translates into shame due to her internalization of the social code of Vienna, which denies her sexual ...
Why We Need Counsellogical Research
... and advice publications and programmes on the book market and in the media, respectively. The Internet is by no means lagging behind, with a variety of websites and networks brimming with advice. All these phenomena add up to a counselling boom, which could not have gone unnoticed or ignored by soc ...
... and advice publications and programmes on the book market and in the media, respectively. The Internet is by no means lagging behind, with a variety of websites and networks brimming with advice. All these phenomena add up to a counselling boom, which could not have gone unnoticed or ignored by soc ...
A Study of Shame-proneness, Drinking Behaviors
... SHAME-PRONENESS, DRINKING BEHAVIORS, AND ROLE AMBIGUITY investigates the relation between shame and drinking, this investigation contributed to the literature by investigating a working population, as well as those individuals engaging in all levels of reported drinking (as opposed to only heavy an ...
... SHAME-PRONENESS, DRINKING BEHAVIORS, AND ROLE AMBIGUITY investigates the relation between shame and drinking, this investigation contributed to the literature by investigating a working population, as well as those individuals engaging in all levels of reported drinking (as opposed to only heavy an ...
The Problem of Excess - American Sociological Association
... this larger, foregrounded situation of individual scarcity. Malthus thus turns excess into a literal obverse of scarcity, which it is not in either Mandeville or Smith. Malthus makes this inversion quite deliberately, pitching his argument against what he sees as the overly optimistic social theory ...
... this larger, foregrounded situation of individual scarcity. Malthus thus turns excess into a literal obverse of scarcity, which it is not in either Mandeville or Smith. Malthus makes this inversion quite deliberately, pitching his argument against what he sees as the overly optimistic social theory ...
... with the suggestion, “Given the importance of free speech,” whereas only 45% were in favor when the question was prefaced with the phrase, “Given the risk of violence” (Sniderman & Theriault 2004).1 Similarly, about 20% of the American public believes that too little is being spent on “welfare,” but ...
Motivated Moral Reasoning
... we have a deep affective stake in wanting others to perceive us as actors of good moral character (and thus to perceive ourselves in similar fashion), but also why we care deeply about the moral character of others. Moreover, as researchers have noted for years, people desire a world that makes good ...
... we have a deep affective stake in wanting others to perceive us as actors of good moral character (and thus to perceive ourselves in similar fashion), but also why we care deeply about the moral character of others. Moreover, as researchers have noted for years, people desire a world that makes good ...
The dynamic moral self
... self-regard may have a greater impact on their global self-worth than it does for individuals who place less general importance on being moral. Individuals may also show stable differences in their average moral self-regard. But we contend that as with the self-concept more generally (see Markus & N ...
... self-regard may have a greater impact on their global self-worth than it does for individuals who place less general importance on being moral. Individuals may also show stable differences in their average moral self-regard. But we contend that as with the self-concept more generally (see Markus & N ...
Interaction with Deaf People
... processed from casual conversations, TV, radio, etc. Some research has shown that up to 80% of what we know about interaction with the world around us is due to incidental learning. Deaf people often do not have access to this information on the same level as hearing people, and there may thus be pi ...
... processed from casual conversations, TV, radio, etc. Some research has shown that up to 80% of what we know about interaction with the world around us is due to incidental learning. Deaf people often do not have access to this information on the same level as hearing people, and there may thus be pi ...
Historical Social Research Historische Sozialforschung
... 2008), or Bowker and Star (1999). Classification, among other valuation practices, represents a central topic in these studies. As valuation practices, classifications are foundational in that they, on the one hand, ascribe value to objects comparatively and, on the other hand, prearrange objects fo ...
... 2008), or Bowker and Star (1999). Classification, among other valuation practices, represents a central topic in these studies. As valuation practices, classifications are foundational in that they, on the one hand, ascribe value to objects comparatively and, on the other hand, prearrange objects fo ...
HSL, Harpur Hill Buxton, SK17 9JN Telephone: 01298 218000
... The participants’ familiarity with the issue needs to be considered. If the participants are unfamiliar with the issue (as is potentially the case with permissioning regimes) then the issue of informing the participant needs to be incorporated as part of the consultation process, and becomes a centr ...
... The participants’ familiarity with the issue needs to be considered. If the participants are unfamiliar with the issue (as is potentially the case with permissioning regimes) then the issue of informing the participant needs to be incorporated as part of the consultation process, and becomes a centr ...
GUIDE FOR CONSTRUCTING SELF
... analysis of the relevant domain of functioning. Knowledge of the activity domain specifies which aspects of personal efficacy should be measured. Consider the self-management of weight as an example. Weight is determined by what people eat, by their level of exercise, which burns calories and can ra ...
... analysis of the relevant domain of functioning. Knowledge of the activity domain specifies which aspects of personal efficacy should be measured. Consider the self-management of weight as an example. Weight is determined by what people eat, by their level of exercise, which burns calories and can ra ...
Rethinking the Clinical vs. Social Reform Debate: a Dialectical
... stated their own version of social work ‘theory,’ a comprehensive definition of social work. The terms “clinical” and “social reform” are also used regularly throughout this work; they are basically shorthand for the two major perspectives in social work that historically reside on the one hand with ...
... stated their own version of social work ‘theory,’ a comprehensive definition of social work. The terms “clinical” and “social reform” are also used regularly throughout this work; they are basically shorthand for the two major perspectives in social work that historically reside on the one hand with ...
The Dynamics of Persuasion
... The focus on theory, concepts, and basic research remains. The book is organized in generally the same way as the first edition. However, in an effort to modernize, reflect the field, and connect with readers, particularly students, I have done much rewriting—actually new writing. Although the forma ...
... The focus on theory, concepts, and basic research remains. The book is organized in generally the same way as the first edition. However, in an effort to modernize, reflect the field, and connect with readers, particularly students, I have done much rewriting—actually new writing. Although the forma ...
Maquetación 1 - Colegio Oficial de Psicólogos de Madrid
... contrast, interactions with significant others who are unavailable and unresponsive to one’s needs elicit insecurities regarding the responses of others, one’s own value, and the effectiveness of proximity-seeking strategies. In the past two decades, several studies have examined the connection betw ...
... contrast, interactions with significant others who are unavailable and unresponsive to one’s needs elicit insecurities regarding the responses of others, one’s own value, and the effectiveness of proximity-seeking strategies. In the past two decades, several studies have examined the connection betw ...