The Preference for Belief Consonance
... and then interpret existing evidence in a way that bolsters these conclusions. A second reason why people might want others to have similar views (or, equivalently, to have similar beliefs to others) is because they want to hold certain beliefs, and the presence of other people with different belief ...
... and then interpret existing evidence in a way that bolsters these conclusions. A second reason why people might want others to have similar views (or, equivalently, to have similar beliefs to others) is because they want to hold certain beliefs, and the presence of other people with different belief ...
Alfred Schutz`s main contributions to the field of economic reflection
... the activities of the subjective pre-scientific experience: «Schutz’s big achievement in the present context is the “descriptive analysis of economics” (…), which elucidates what economists do. Most of them, including Mises, overlooked the lifeworldly ground of economic theory» (Eberle 2009: 505. It ...
... the activities of the subjective pre-scientific experience: «Schutz’s big achievement in the present context is the “descriptive analysis of economics” (…), which elucidates what economists do. Most of them, including Mises, overlooked the lifeworldly ground of economic theory» (Eberle 2009: 505. It ...
View - Political Economy Research Institute
... support and told to fend for themselves” –which suggests, I think quite rightly, that the relationship between the state and the public sector and the creation of social wealth through unpaid work is a critical one; and that we should not see households or voluntary organizations as, in some sense, ...
... support and told to fend for themselves” –which suggests, I think quite rightly, that the relationship between the state and the public sector and the creation of social wealth through unpaid work is a critical one; and that we should not see households or voluntary organizations as, in some sense, ...
groups and morality - Projects at Harvard
... Although social and personality psychologists examine individuals’ use of specific notions of right and wrong—based on such concepts as justice, trustworthiness, warmth, cooperation, and harm— they tend to avoid the question of whether individuals’ subjective notions of right and wrong are actually ...
... Although social and personality psychologists examine individuals’ use of specific notions of right and wrong—based on such concepts as justice, trustworthiness, warmth, cooperation, and harm— they tend to avoid the question of whether individuals’ subjective notions of right and wrong are actually ...
Bulletin Personality and Social Psychology
... political views than the views of other people, including those on their own side of the issue (Pronin et al., 2004; Pronin, Lin, & Ross, 2002). Of greater importance for this article, however, participants believed that “people on the other side (of the issue) in particular” were more influenced by ...
... political views than the views of other people, including those on their own side of the issue (Pronin et al., 2004; Pronin, Lin, & Ross, 2002). Of greater importance for this article, however, participants believed that “people on the other side (of the issue) in particular” were more influenced by ...
Hyperfriendship and Beyond: Friends and - Kate Raynes
... development. This survey consisted of background questions; questions about the composition of the respondent's friends list; and questions about the respondent's behaviors and attitudes with respect to friending/defriending. Respondents answered the majority of these questions using a 7-point Liker ...
... development. This survey consisted of background questions; questions about the composition of the respondent's friends list; and questions about the respondent's behaviors and attitudes with respect to friending/defriending. Respondents answered the majority of these questions using a 7-point Liker ...
Mind Self and Society from the Standpoint of a Social Behaviorist
... another self. Two separate "Me's" and "I's," two different selves, result, and that is the condition under which there is a tendency to break up the personality. There is an account of a professor of education who disappeared, was lost to the community, and later turned up in a logging camp in the W ...
... another self. Two separate "Me's" and "I's," two different selves, result, and that is the condition under which there is a tendency to break up the personality. There is an account of a professor of education who disappeared, was lost to the community, and later turned up in a logging camp in the W ...
Implicit attitudes and discrimination against people with
... stigmatizing conditions: (a) tribal identities (e.g., race, sex, religion, or nation); (b) abominations of the body (e.g., physical deformities), and (c) blemishes of individual character (e.g., mental disorders, addictions, unemployment). The concept of differentiated reactions to members of differ ...
... stigmatizing conditions: (a) tribal identities (e.g., race, sex, religion, or nation); (b) abominations of the body (e.g., physical deformities), and (c) blemishes of individual character (e.g., mental disorders, addictions, unemployment). The concept of differentiated reactions to members of differ ...
ETHNOCENTRISM, SOCIAL CONTRACT LIBERALISM AND
... unmask their social contingency, and the self could be conceptualised as an epiphenomenon of a discursive disciplinary power regime, where no selfovercoming was possible. Rorty, however, takes a different view. Having rejected the modernist conceit, he wants to make us shift our attention to practic ...
... unmask their social contingency, and the self could be conceptualised as an epiphenomenon of a discursive disciplinary power regime, where no selfovercoming was possible. Rorty, however, takes a different view. Having rejected the modernist conceit, he wants to make us shift our attention to practic ...
Services aux enfants et adultes - Brant Family and Children`s Services
... There are resource fit models where the concern is whether or not a person has available to them the resources that are required to deal with specific demands. There is also a great deal of literature on social support and how it might be marshaled as a major resource. However, in the coping literat ...
... There are resource fit models where the concern is whether or not a person has available to them the resources that are required to deal with specific demands. There is also a great deal of literature on social support and how it might be marshaled as a major resource. However, in the coping literat ...
Power Reduces the Press of the Situation: Implications for Creativity
... the attitudes, intentions, and creative expressions of high-power individuals than it will on individuals without power. Our approach demonstrates an interest in power and responsiveness to the situation in general, rather than a specific form of power or situational influence, and we draw on a vari ...
... the attitudes, intentions, and creative expressions of high-power individuals than it will on individuals without power. Our approach demonstrates an interest in power and responsiveness to the situation in general, rather than a specific form of power or situational influence, and we draw on a vari ...
- ePrints Soton
... accounting for the market success of certain consumer goods, this research has demonstrated how product styles (e.g., of music) that were popular during one’s youth influence one’s lifelong preferences. Although these findings are important, we have attempted to lay the foundation for a broader pers ...
... accounting for the market success of certain consumer goods, this research has demonstrated how product styles (e.g., of music) that were popular during one’s youth influence one’s lifelong preferences. Although these findings are important, we have attempted to lay the foundation for a broader pers ...
Public apologia, moral transgression and degradation ceremonies
... theorists one needs to understand first and foremost “what works, when, under what circumstances”. The most common assumption of apologia is that what lies behind it is a strategic motivation to save face. Apologia brings into the foreground the cultural norm of remedial work on social relationships ...
... theorists one needs to understand first and foremost “what works, when, under what circumstances”. The most common assumption of apologia is that what lies behind it is a strategic motivation to save face. Apologia brings into the foreground the cultural norm of remedial work on social relationships ...
The Effects of Persuasion on Implicit and Explicit
... may aid the perceiver in making inferences about others and in understanding what to expect from them. Stereotypes may be especially influential when perceivers have little information about a specific individual and when responses are made either very rapidly or without much conscious deliberation ...
... may aid the perceiver in making inferences about others and in understanding what to expect from them. Stereotypes may be especially influential when perceivers have little information about a specific individual and when responses are made either very rapidly or without much conscious deliberation ...
Chap 9 PPT
... Distinctiveness: Perceiving People Who Stand Out Distinctive people Feeds on self-consciousness Dartmouth women with “disfigured faces” - (Kleck & Strenta, ‘80) What did they believe about others reactions? Majority beliefs about what minorities stereotypes of them are “meta stereotypes” S ...
... Distinctiveness: Perceiving People Who Stand Out Distinctive people Feeds on self-consciousness Dartmouth women with “disfigured faces” - (Kleck & Strenta, ‘80) What did they believe about others reactions? Majority beliefs about what minorities stereotypes of them are “meta stereotypes” S ...
From Sch¨utz to Goffman: The Search for Social Order
... delving too far into such a discussion. Rather, this article focuses on another limitation in Schütz’s approach, that of the possibility of social change. As Augier et al. has rightly pointed out, Schütz wants to understand the process of choosing and he is interested in the typicality of choice. ...
... delving too far into such a discussion. Rather, this article focuses on another limitation in Schütz’s approach, that of the possibility of social change. As Augier et al. has rightly pointed out, Schütz wants to understand the process of choosing and he is interested in the typicality of choice. ...
Fulltext: english,
... intentions (contributing a further 5% over and above the main theory of planned behaviour predictors), so the authors argue that the confirmed relationship between descriptive norms and intentions implies the possible existence of predictive power of these variables, giving way to a strong motivation ...
... intentions (contributing a further 5% over and above the main theory of planned behaviour predictors), so the authors argue that the confirmed relationship between descriptive norms and intentions implies the possible existence of predictive power of these variables, giving way to a strong motivation ...
perspectives
... basis of group membership is a kind of predictive mechanism we use in various social situations. Consider an example familiar to college students. On the first day of class, students meet Professor X. Professor X is known only as part of the group called professors, about which there are certain gen ...
... basis of group membership is a kind of predictive mechanism we use in various social situations. Consider an example familiar to college students. On the first day of class, students meet Professor X. Professor X is known only as part of the group called professors, about which there are certain gen ...
Print this article
... small scale and cooperative structure of ICs are conducive to resource efficient technologies and practices, such as localizing food systems and collectivizing energy systems (Meltzer, 2005). Specific measures frequently taken in cohousing include composting (96%), community managed recycling (94%), ...
... small scale and cooperative structure of ICs are conducive to resource efficient technologies and practices, such as localizing food systems and collectivizing energy systems (Meltzer, 2005). Specific measures frequently taken in cohousing include composting (96%), community managed recycling (94%), ...
Attribution
... Psychology, Fourth Edition, AP Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White © 2015, 2012, 2009 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. ...
... Psychology, Fourth Edition, AP Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White © 2015, 2012, 2009 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. ...
Friends of Victims
... money to researching Alzheimer’s disease and others to nourishing children in Africa? Why do some people Race for the Cure䉸 of breast cancer, while others walk to cure multiple sclerosis? The current research sheds light on these general questions. More specifically, we examine one powerful reason b ...
... money to researching Alzheimer’s disease and others to nourishing children in Africa? Why do some people Race for the Cure䉸 of breast cancer, while others walk to cure multiple sclerosis? The current research sheds light on these general questions. More specifically, we examine one powerful reason b ...
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
... violations, compared to harm violations, also tend to be explained in terms of person-based attributes, compared to situation-based attributes (Chakroff & Young, 2015). If purity issues are more likely than other moral issues to lead to dispositional inferences about others, they might also have str ...
... violations, compared to harm violations, also tend to be explained in terms of person-based attributes, compared to situation-based attributes (Chakroff & Young, 2015). If purity issues are more likely than other moral issues to lead to dispositional inferences about others, they might also have str ...
Untangling the Spatial Structure of Political Participation
... The social interactionist thesis enjoys considerable empirical support. Given the importance of information exchange under the social interactionist framework, much of the recent literature has sought to examine the degree of congruence between an individual’s political attitudes and behavior with t ...
... The social interactionist thesis enjoys considerable empirical support. Given the importance of information exchange under the social interactionist framework, much of the recent literature has sought to examine the degree of congruence between an individual’s political attitudes and behavior with t ...
Competition vs
... However there are many social, legal, economic, political and technological factors that determine the structure of competition and in the environment of growing globalization competition is inevitable. Of these, the factors which determine the nature of competition, including not only rivals, but a ...
... However there are many social, legal, economic, political and technological factors that determine the structure of competition and in the environment of growing globalization competition is inevitable. Of these, the factors which determine the nature of competition, including not only rivals, but a ...
Understanding Sanctions in Social Dilemmas: A Biopsychological
... that is, mutual cooperation (i.e., all anglers participate in cleaning the lake and its surroundings). These considerations emphasize why Hardin (1968) speaks of a “tragedy” when he describes social dilemma situations. Behaving selfishly is always the most beneficial strategy from a rational choice ...
... that is, mutual cooperation (i.e., all anglers participate in cleaning the lake and its surroundings). These considerations emphasize why Hardin (1968) speaks of a “tragedy” when he describes social dilemma situations. Behaving selfishly is always the most beneficial strategy from a rational choice ...