The Legacy Motive: A Catalyst for Sustainable Decision Making in
... generation has complete and unilateral decision-making power; future others who will be impacted by the decision have no voice in the decision process or outcome. Second, social actors are removed from the social exchange context over time by death, retirement, or some other symbolic detachment from ...
... generation has complete and unilateral decision-making power; future others who will be impacted by the decision have no voice in the decision process or outcome. Second, social actors are removed from the social exchange context over time by death, retirement, or some other symbolic detachment from ...
Human relationships google doc summary
... Strength: The study successfully showed that their might be a possible connection between romantic love and low levels of serotonin in the blood. Limitation: This study had been opposed by Fisher(2004) that it is not possible to document the exact role of serotonin in romantic love. Evolutionary ori ...
... Strength: The study successfully showed that their might be a possible connection between romantic love and low levels of serotonin in the blood. Limitation: This study had been opposed by Fisher(2004) that it is not possible to document the exact role of serotonin in romantic love. Evolutionary ori ...
Chapter 2 - Dr. Saadia McLeod
... be aware of our own mortality. 2. This creates great anxiety, which can be reduced by cultural worldviews that promote selfesteem and faith. 3. These constructs give people a sense of order, context, and meaning. 4. These, along with self-esteem, serve as buffers against the anxiety that death aware ...
... be aware of our own mortality. 2. This creates great anxiety, which can be reduced by cultural worldviews that promote selfesteem and faith. 3. These constructs give people a sense of order, context, and meaning. 4. These, along with self-esteem, serve as buffers against the anxiety that death aware ...
MAKING USE OF SOCIAL PROTOTYPES: FROM
... the casual observer repeatedly perceives and employs imperfectly structured person, situation and object categories. The importance of the conceptualization of natural categories, social categories in particular, as fuzzy sets is its prescription for studying how the social observer responds to the ...
... the casual observer repeatedly perceives and employs imperfectly structured person, situation and object categories. The importance of the conceptualization of natural categories, social categories in particular, as fuzzy sets is its prescription for studying how the social observer responds to the ...
Gender and Communication: Male-Female Differences in Language
... The voice is an extraordinary human instrument. Every time we speak, our voice reveals our gender, age, geographic background, level of education, native birth, emotional state, and our relationship with the person spoken to. All these clues (and many more) are contained in even small fragments of s ...
... The voice is an extraordinary human instrument. Every time we speak, our voice reveals our gender, age, geographic background, level of education, native birth, emotional state, and our relationship with the person spoken to. All these clues (and many more) are contained in even small fragments of s ...
Medium Theory and Social Systems
... of Niklas Luhmann offers a sociological theory both explaining the micro level and the macro level including both social evolution and reproduction. The systems theory includes three different kinds of media seen as evolutionary developed answers to improbabilities. Starting from a zero point of evo ...
... of Niklas Luhmann offers a sociological theory both explaining the micro level and the macro level including both social evolution and reproduction. The systems theory includes three different kinds of media seen as evolutionary developed answers to improbabilities. Starting from a zero point of evo ...
Political Obligation - Flinders University
... acknowledged by Deegan (1998) however, many papers use the notion of the social contract as part of other theories, eg. legitimacy theory, where “…there is a ‘social contract’ between the organisation and those affected by the organisation’s operations” and which may be revoked if they operate outsi ...
... acknowledged by Deegan (1998) however, many papers use the notion of the social contract as part of other theories, eg. legitimacy theory, where “…there is a ‘social contract’ between the organisation and those affected by the organisation’s operations” and which may be revoked if they operate outsi ...
University of Birmingham Social norms and their influence on eating
... When referring to this publication, please cite the published version. Copyright and associated moral rights for publications accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners. It is a condition of accessing this publication that users abide by the legal requi ...
... When referring to this publication, please cite the published version. Copyright and associated moral rights for publications accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners. It is a condition of accessing this publication that users abide by the legal requi ...
"Pollution and Purity" In: The Wiley Blackwell
... healthy living. Here cleanliness has assumed a medical status and dropped its metaphorical identity. Infection, contagion, the touch of dirt – hygiene’s antipode – is the origin of many diseases. Unclean water and lack of good sanitation are known to be major killers of people in poor societies (Cu ...
... healthy living. Here cleanliness has assumed a medical status and dropped its metaphorical identity. Infection, contagion, the touch of dirt – hygiene’s antipode – is the origin of many diseases. Unclean water and lack of good sanitation are known to be major killers of people in poor societies (Cu ...
doc psyc 100 notes
... Critical thinking skill: identifying the need for control groups, recognizing that large samples are more reliable than small samples What is scientific inquiry? It is a way of finding answers to empirical questions that can be answered by observations or measure. It has 4 goals: describing what hap ...
... Critical thinking skill: identifying the need for control groups, recognizing that large samples are more reliable than small samples What is scientific inquiry? It is a way of finding answers to empirical questions that can be answered by observations or measure. It has 4 goals: describing what hap ...
development of identity in native indian children
... not ask any other questions so it is difficult to determine whether developmental, motivational or other factors influenced children's responses. Nevertheless, the finding that Native children perceived themselves to be more similar to majority group members when Native peoples were in the majority ...
... not ask any other questions so it is difficult to determine whether developmental, motivational or other factors influenced children's responses. Nevertheless, the finding that Native children perceived themselves to be more similar to majority group members when Native peoples were in the majority ...
1 - University of Warwick
... theoretical explanation. The goal of this paper is to present such a theoretical argument. Vulnerability can haven many causes (poverty, poor schooling, ill health, social isolation…) but it is a condition or set of experiences that people have to cope with. They must “process” it to be able to live ...
... theoretical explanation. The goal of this paper is to present such a theoretical argument. Vulnerability can haven many causes (poverty, poor schooling, ill health, social isolation…) but it is a condition or set of experiences that people have to cope with. They must “process” it to be able to live ...
Categories of Music Description and Search Terms
... generally worse than that of images. Furthermore, it was thought that it would be extremely difficult for participants to remember several unfamiliar musical pieces from the same genre over time. To the researchers’ knowledge, there have been no studies conducted using this methodology in music IR. ...
... generally worse than that of images. Furthermore, it was thought that it would be extremely difficult for participants to remember several unfamiliar musical pieces from the same genre over time. To the researchers’ knowledge, there have been no studies conducted using this methodology in music IR. ...
General Psychology – PSY2012 Learning Objectives by Chapter
... What happens during the germinal, embryonic, and fetal periods of pregnancy, and what are some hazards in prenatal development? What kind of physical changes take place in infancy and childhood? What are two ways of looking at cognitive development, and how does language develop? How do infants and ...
... What happens during the germinal, embryonic, and fetal periods of pregnancy, and what are some hazards in prenatal development? What kind of physical changes take place in infancy and childhood? What are two ways of looking at cognitive development, and how does language develop? How do infants and ...
LEEDS DIALOGICALITY Ivana Marková Background
... century. This school was represented by scholars like Buber, Rosenstock, Rosenzweig and Cassirer, among others. In this philosophy, dialogism was based on the idea of the ‘dialogical principle’. By ‘dialogical principle’ neoKantians meant the relationship between ‘I’ and ‘you’ (or ‘I’ and ‘Thou’), t ...
... century. This school was represented by scholars like Buber, Rosenstock, Rosenzweig and Cassirer, among others. In this philosophy, dialogism was based on the idea of the ‘dialogical principle’. By ‘dialogical principle’ neoKantians meant the relationship between ‘I’ and ‘you’ (or ‘I’ and ‘Thou’), t ...
An Afrocentric Perspective on Social Welfare Philosophy and Policy
... culture, with its additional feature of individualism, is seen as the quintessence of the Eurocentric worldview. Afrocentrists say that this overemphasis on individualism, materialism, and fragmentation has led to inordinate inequality and exploitation and has devalued the worldviews of people of co ...
... culture, with its additional feature of individualism, is seen as the quintessence of the Eurocentric worldview. Afrocentrists say that this overemphasis on individualism, materialism, and fragmentation has led to inordinate inequality and exploitation and has devalued the worldviews of people of co ...
Immigration from the perspective of hosts and immigrants: Roles of
... immigrants in Australia over the last 20 years. The intergroup context has been characterized by some experienced threat of being ‘overtaken’ by a group that are stereotypically thought to be more capable, more intelligent and culturally distinct. In this context, essentialist beliefs frame these di ...
... immigrants in Australia over the last 20 years. The intergroup context has been characterized by some experienced threat of being ‘overtaken’ by a group that are stereotypically thought to be more capable, more intelligent and culturally distinct. In this context, essentialist beliefs frame these di ...
Copyright © 2001. All Rights Reserved.
... An analogy may help to clarify the distinction we wish to draw between tbe processes involved when traveling the central versus peripheral route to persuasion. Consider first the case of a student wbo has studied diligently for an exam. Tbe student knows the material over which he is being tested, r ...
... An analogy may help to clarify the distinction we wish to draw between tbe processes involved when traveling the central versus peripheral route to persuasion. Consider first the case of a student wbo has studied diligently for an exam. Tbe student knows the material over which he is being tested, r ...
5. Change is Central to Sociology
... gendered formulation: ‘Men make their own history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past’ (Marx 1977, 301; first published 1852). The dichotomy that ...
... gendered formulation: ‘Men make their own history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past’ (Marx 1977, 301; first published 1852). The dichotomy that ...
PDF - UNT Digital Library
... Internet‟s unique features can fit different users‟ personality types. Researchers (Hamburger, 2002; Hamburger & Ben-Artzi, 2000, 2003; Landers & Lounsbury, 2006) have mainly focused on the use of the Internet and different users‟ personality traits. For example, people who are socially anxious and ...
... Internet‟s unique features can fit different users‟ personality types. Researchers (Hamburger, 2002; Hamburger & Ben-Artzi, 2000, 2003; Landers & Lounsbury, 2006) have mainly focused on the use of the Internet and different users‟ personality traits. For example, people who are socially anxious and ...
Structuration Theory and Self-Organization
... (1996) says that complexity can be characterized by a lack of symmetry (symmetry breaking), which means that “no part or aspect of a complex entity can provide sufficient information to actually or statistically predict the properties of the others parts,” and Edmonds (1996) defines complexity as “t ...
... (1996) says that complexity can be characterized by a lack of symmetry (symmetry breaking), which means that “no part or aspect of a complex entity can provide sufficient information to actually or statistically predict the properties of the others parts,” and Edmonds (1996) defines complexity as “t ...
Basic Concepts and Theories
... a motile strategy to go after the substances and conditions they need, the most basic requirement for their survival is successful goal-striving. In that case, all animal evolution, right up to humans, must have centered on natural selection of whatever facilitated attaining goals. This must mean th ...
... a motile strategy to go after the substances and conditions they need, the most basic requirement for their survival is successful goal-striving. In that case, all animal evolution, right up to humans, must have centered on natural selection of whatever facilitated attaining goals. This must mean th ...
introduction to sociology
... the world come out? Why are our conditions of life so different from those of our parents and grandparents? What directions will change take in the future? These questions are the prime concern of Sociology, a field of study that consequently has a fundamental role to play in modern intellectual lif ...
... the world come out? Why are our conditions of life so different from those of our parents and grandparents? What directions will change take in the future? These questions are the prime concern of Sociology, a field of study that consequently has a fundamental role to play in modern intellectual lif ...
The Role of Virtual Communities as Shopping Reference Groups
... their interactions are accessible to outsiders (“lurkers”) who for various reasons do not contribute to discussions, but nevertheless may be strongly influenced by the community. The text-based computer-mediated nature of virtual communities makes them more unique, and not identifiable in terms of t ...
... their interactions are accessible to outsiders (“lurkers”) who for various reasons do not contribute to discussions, but nevertheless may be strongly influenced by the community. The text-based computer-mediated nature of virtual communities makes them more unique, and not identifiable in terms of t ...
making sense of east asian self-enhancement
... These results are of great importance: first, for showing clearly that cultural differences generalize to the real world outside of the laboratory, but also for showing that some of our most fundamental motivations to see “us” as better than “them” are culturally grounded. Muramoto approached the qu ...
... These results are of great importance: first, for showing clearly that cultural differences generalize to the real world outside of the laboratory, but also for showing that some of our most fundamental motivations to see “us” as better than “them” are culturally grounded. Muramoto approached the qu ...