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  • ...education, health, immigrants, prejudice, racial [[identity]] development, social [[ecology]], stereotyping, teaching multiculturalism, tokenism, [[values]], [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...nce|applied]] field involving the study of behavior and mental processes. Psychology also refers to the application of such [[knowledge]] to various spheres of ...e a lot of cross-fertilization that takes place among the various fields. Psychology differs from [[biology]] and [[neuroscience]] in that it is primarily conce
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  • Full-text book reviews and some film and video reviews in psychology and related disciplines. ...base also includes all reviews published in the print journal Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books between 1956 (Volume 1, Issue 1) and 2004. In addition
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  • '''''[https://0-isiknowledge.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/wos Social Science Citation Index]''''' ..., Political Science, Psychology, Psychiatry, Public Health, Social Issues, Social Work, Sociology, Substance Abuse, Urban Studies, Women's Studies. One of th
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  • .... The collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ..., toys and games, health, physiology, law, the criminal justice system and social welfare. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...[discipline]]s within the Biomedical, [[Natural Sciences|Physical]], and [[Social Sciences]]." "Intelligent [[synthesis]] of the Scientific Literature." ...- Physiology - Phytopathology - Plant Biology - [[Political Science]] - [[Psychology]] - [[Public Health]] - Resource Economics - [[Sociology]]
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  • ...urban sociology, social development, social psychology, social structure, social work, socio-cultural anthropology, sociological history, sociological resea
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  • ...yness. Stronger forms are usually referred to as [[social]] [[anxiety]] or social phobia. Shyness may merely be a [[personality]] [[trait]] or can occur at c [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...[[ethnicity]], [[race]], and nation; of [[sexuality]] and the [[body]]; of social institutions and the [[structure]]s of representation. Topics include chang [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...vers the [[biology|biological]], [[psychology|psychological]], [[sociology|social]], and [[economics|economic]] aspects of [[health]] and aging and impacts w
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  • ...ussed in that particular social group; while a person with a high level of social inhibition would avoid [[touching]] on such subjects. Inhibitions can serve [[necessary]] [[social]] [[functions]], reducing or preventing certain [[antisocial]] [[impulses]]
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  • ==Social nagging== ...a person to nag are [[differences]] in "[[gender]], social distance, and [[social status]] and [[power]]".
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  • ...[Action (philosophy)|action]]. Animal behavior is studied in [[comparative psychology]], [[ethology]], [[behavioral ecology]] and [[sociobiology]]. ...y as "behaviorism." Behaviorism was a reaction against so-called "faculty" psychology which purported to see into or understand the mind without the benefit of s
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  • ...sexual [[repression]] leading to rigid personalities, in the original Mass psychology of fascism (1933) by Freudo-Marxist [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_ *'''''[[Social movement]]'''''
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  • ...havior]], [[genetics]], [[ancient civilization]]s, cross-cultural studies, social theories, and the [[value]] of human [[language]] for [[symbol]]ic [[commun
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  • ...osed]]. These impacts are due in part to characteristics [[inherent]] in [[social]] [[interaction]]s, [[institutions]], and systems of [[cultural]] [[values] ...oodrow 1998; Alwang, Siegel et al. 2001; Conway and Norton 2002). However, social vulnerability is a pre-existing condition that [[affects]] a [[society]]’
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  • ...ssues and Sexuality: Essential Primary Sources''''' [[focus]]es on leading social issues of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. Each title contains approxima [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...stinguishing rumination from reflection. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 76, 284-304. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • [[File:lighterstill.jpg]][[File:Cropped-ideology-psychology-and-law2.jpg|right|frame]] ...itive science] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_psychology social psychology].
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  • '''Agression''', in [[psychology]], as well as other [[Social Sciences|social and behavioral sciences]], refers to [[behavior]] between members of the s [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • An '''organization''' (or organisation — see spelling [[differences]]) is a social arrangement which pursues [[collective]] goals, [[controls]] its own [[perf ...common of which are [[sociology]], [[economics]], [[political science]], [[psychology]], management, and organizational [[communication]]. The broad area is comm
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  • ...stage fright may be a part of a larger [[pattern]] of [[social]] phobia or social anxiety disorder, but many people experience stage fright without any wider ...xiety]] or social phobia which are chronic feelings of high anxiety in any social situation. Stage fright can also be seen in [[school]] situations, like sta
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  • ...abs], or anyone the group perceives as a threat or source of [[conflict]]. Social rejection has been established to cause [[psychological]] damage and has be Social [[rejection]] was and is a punishment used by many customary [[legal]] syst
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  • ...proposed, including [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_exchange_theory social exchange theory], equity theory, relational dialectics, and [https://en.wik ...or good [[health]] and longevity. Conversely, [[loneliness]] and a lack of social supports have been linked to an increased risk of heart disease, viral infe
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  • [[Sympathy]] is a social affinity in which one [[person]] stands with another person, closely [[unde ...C.D. (2007). Social neuroscience approaches to interpersonal sensitivity. Social Neuroscience, 2(3-4), 151-157.
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  • ...ck, S. (1966). Affect and expectation. ''Journal of Personality and Social Psychology'' '''3''', 38-44. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...al]] is deliberately excluded from a inter[[personal]] [[relationship]] or social relation. The [[topic]] includes both interpersonal rejection (or [[peer]] ...ave especially [[negative]] [[effects]], particularly when it results in [[social]] [[isolation]].
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  • ...ith a range of new entries on topics such as [[politics]], [[religion]], [[psychology]], and computers. The book covers current [[research]] in and approaches to
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  • ...ation or object with marked distress and significant [[interference]] in [[social]] or occupational activities. ...IV-TR states that if a phobic [[stimulus]], whether it be an object or a [[social]] situation, is absent entirely in an environment — a diagnosis cannot be
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  • ...y; especially : being or marked by [[behavior]] deviating sharply from the social [[norm]] ...iagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders], [[persistent]] anti-social behaviour is part of a diagnosis of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisoci
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  • The social [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_study_of_religion scientific stud ...think about [[society]]. This would really be an encyclopedia of religious social [[ethics]], and it is not within the scope of this project.
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  • ...[concepts|concept]] used generally to signify the process of thought. In [[psychology]] and [[cognitive science]] it refers to [[information]] processing by an i ...eurology, [[psychology]], [[philosophy]], and [[computer science]]. Within psychology or philosophy, the concept of cognition is closely related to abstract [[co
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  • ...rom deviant behavior, since the latter refers to a recognized violation of social rules or norms (although the two terms can apply to the same [[thing]]). It ...treated as a disorder in [[mainstream]] psychiatry (see Homosexuality and psychology).
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  • ...of delusions and hallucinations) and deterioration of [[intellectual]] and social functioning, occurring as a primary disorder or secondary to other diseases
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  • ...[anatomy]], [[biomechanics]], exercise physiology, [[nutrition]], sports [[psychology]], sports [[sociology]], sports injuries, and training principles. It was c ...o understand terms such as A-band, jogger's nipple, maximal aerobic power, social loafing, and zero-sum competition.
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  • ...h, as the name implies, are specific, and social phobia are phobias within social situations such as public speaking and crowded areas.[https://en.wikipedia. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...king. Introverts are easily overwhelmed by too much [[stimulation]] from [[social]] gatherings and engagement, introversion having even been defined by some ...[[social]] ones, whereas shy people (who may be extroverts at heart) avoid social encounters out of [[fear]].[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introversion]
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  • ...in which people function and [[adapt]], as opposed to the general field of psychology which focuses more on what goes wrong or is [[pathological]] with [[human b [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...ue, suggesting that it is a [[fuzzy concept]]. An added difficulty is that social attributes or relationships may not be directly observable and visible, and ...ly beyond what an individual can empirically observe in order to grasp the social domain in all its dimensions — connecting, for example, "private trou
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  • ...to frown than those of a lower [[social status]]. Individuals with a high social status are permitted to display their [[emotions]] more freely, while low d [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...y [[reflect]] and produce inequities based on one’s membership in targeted social [[identity]] groups. If oppressive consequences accrue to institutional law In [[sociology]] and [[psychology]], internalized oppression is the [[manner]] in which an oppressed [[group]
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  • *2: exclusion by general [[consent]] from common [[privileges]] or [[social]] [[acceptance]] ...formal exclusion from a group through social [[rejection]]. Although the [[psychology]] of ostracism takes this further, where it has been defined as “…any [
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  • ...and gregarious. They take [[pleasure]] in activities that involve large [[social]] gatherings, such as parties, [[community]] activities, [[public]] [[demon [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...|hierarchy of human needs]]", and is considered the father of [[humanistic psychology]]. [https://www.scimednet.org/bibliography/transpers_approaches.htm] ..., but he went to graduate school at the University of Wisconsin to study [[psychology]]. While there, he married his cousin Bertha, and found as his chief mentor
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  • ...dent in the [[presence]] of various [[phenomena]], such as inappropriate [[social]] [[interaction]] (e.g., [[aggression]], passivity, or withdrawal). ...and [[expression]] of [[anger]], which are likely to lead to complicated [[social]] interactions, thus causing increased distress.
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  • ...individual]] of undesired [[isolation]] and [[motivate]] her/him to seek [[social]] [[connections]]. ...r loneliness. At the same time, loneliness may be a [[symptom]] of another social or [[psychological]] problem, such as chronic [[depression]].
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  • ...rameters]], as for example an [[environment]] of [[wealth]], education and social [[privilege]] are often historically passed to genetic offspring. In the social and political sciences, the ''nature versus nurture debate'' may be contras
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  • [[Economics]] is a social science that seeks to analyze and describe the production, distribution, an ...]], [[history]], [[religion]], [[marriage]] and [[family]] life, and other social interactions.
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  • === [[Social Sciences]][https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Social_S A holistic discipline studying the integration of different aspects of the [[Social Sciences]], [[Humanities]], and [[Human biology|Human Biology]].
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  • ...of [[research]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_psychology social psychology]. Interpersonal attraction is related to how much we like or dislike someon ...e that people are strongly attracted to look-a-likes in [[physical]] and [[social]] appearance ("like attracts like"). This similarity is in the broadest sen
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  • ..., counseling psychology, mental health counseling, clinical or psychiatric social work, [[marriage]] and family therapy, rehabilitation counseling, school co ...amic] - is a form of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth_psychology depth psychology], whose primary [[focus]] is to [[reveal]] the [[unconscious]] content of a
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  • ...of emotion and lack of [[motivation]]. Schizophrenia causes significant [[social]] and work [[problems]]. Symptoms begin typically in [[Youth|young adulthoo .../en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurobiology neurobiology], [[psychological]] and [[social]] processes appear to be important contributory [[factors]]. Some recreatio
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  • ...anford.edu/entries/emotions-17th18th/LD7Hutcheson.html] and state of mind (psychology). ...word has played a great part in ethical systems, which have spoken of the social or parental ''affections'' as in some sense a part of moral obligation. Fo
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  • ...nct concept. In sociology, an agent is an [[individual]] engaging with the social [[structure]]; '''''the structure and agency debate''''' concerning the lev ...ealist]] and materialist expressions of this [[idea]] of humans treated as social beings, organized to act in concert.
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  • ...eved to be their inherent civic [[virtue]] grounded in their religious and social class. By 1760, this view had been discredited and replaced with the genera ...also the [[appearance]] of an individual. A person offers themselves to a social group through a good appearance or a well demeanored appearance. When an in
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  • ...lead a [[person]] to regret such actions, for various reasons: [[legal]], social, [[psychological]] (including feeling [[guilt]]), [[health]], [[economic]], [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...rsely affected by a [[force]] or [[agent]] <the schools are victims of the social system>: as a (1) : one that is injured, destroyed, or sacrificed under any ...] (TA) first described by Stephen Karpman, which has become widely used in psychology and psychotherapy.
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  • ...from some [[influence]] <the impression on [[behavior]] produced by the [[social]] [[milieu]]> ...or [[event]]; they do so by regulating and controlling [[information]] in social [[interaction]] (Piwinger & Ebert 2001, pp. 1–2). It is usually used syno
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  • ...]] that protects people from being psychologically harmed by problematic [[social]] [[experience]], a behavior that importantly mediates the [[impact]] that ...s to draw inward. They don't wish to be involved in [[relationships]] or [[social]] activities, usually showing a [[fear]] of [[commitment]]. Individuals may
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  • ...[[source]] of its unhappiness. More recently, the ''Penguin Dictionary of Psychology'' defines hate as a "deep, enduring, [[intense]] [[emotion]] expressing ani ...imes target victims because of their [[perceived]] membership in a certain social [[group]], usually defined by racial [[group]], [[gender]], [[religion]], [
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  • ...pleasure]] in inflicting it. If this is [[supported]] by a [[legal]] or [[social]] framework, then receives the name of [[perversion]]. [https://en.wikipedi [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • .... Harvard psychologist, Herbert Kelman identified three broad varieties of social influence.[1] *1. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compliance_(psychology) Compliance] is when people appear to agree with others, but actually keep
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  • However, maturity need not [[reflect]] one's [[actions]] in a social situation among well-known peers, as in these situations there is no need t ...en a person's true ability to react to a situation can be seen. Artificial social interactions are often misjudged as many people rely on outward [[appearanc
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  • ...lar, but essentially, a legal boundary is a [[conceptual]] [[entity]], a [[social]] construct, adjunct to the likewise [[abstract]] entity of [https://en.wik ...ix of [[beliefs]], [[opinions]], [[attitudes]], past [[experiences]] and [[social]] learning.
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  • ...ing a personality disorder if their abnormalities of behavior impair their social or occupational functioning. Additionally, personality disorders are inflex ...the theory and diagnosis of personality disorders are based strictly on [[social]], or even sociopolitical and [[economic]] considerations.[https://en.wikip
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  • ...m]] focus of psychological [[research]]. [4] The study of gratitude within psychology has focused on the understanding of the short term experience of the emotio ...people, possessions, the present [[moment]], [[ritual]]s, feeling of awe, social comparisons, [[existential]] concerns, and [[behaviour]] which expresses gr
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  • ...derive from a [[sense]] of low[[ self-esteem]] that results from an upward social [[comparison]] threatening a person's [[self]] image: another person has so ...ocracy]] and must be endured in order to achieve a more [[just]] [[Society|social system].
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  • ...sed to denote [[elitism]] or an indifference to the plight of others. In [[psychology]], the term is used to describe both [[normal]] self-love and unhealthy sel Today, in [[psychology]], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissistic_personality_disorder narciss
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  • ...accurately, by [[stories]], rumors, reports, pictures, and other forms of social [[communication]]". Rumors are also often [[discussed]] with regard to "mi
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  • ...also in the [[Social Sciences|social science]]s (such as [[economics]], [[psychology]], [[sociology]] and [[political science]]); [[physics|physicist]]s, engine
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  • ...ers. Some social psychologists identify it as linked to a signal of high [[social status]]. In contrast pride could also be defined as a disagreement with th [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ..., [[morality]]), which has substantial bearing in matters of (personal and social) [[honor]]. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • [[human]] or [[superhuman]]. Religion and social consciousness have this in common: They are predicated on the [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...ued in life (spiritual or materialistic for example), perspective on life, social attitudes, etc. *[https://www.path-work.info Atlas of Wisdom: Wisdom in Psychology and Spirituality]
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  • ...ned by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_psychology evolutionary psychology] as a consequence of [[ancestral]] humans who selected partners based on se ...ficant [[effect]] on how people are [[judged]] in terms of employment or [[social]] [[opportunities]], [[friendship]], [[sexual]] [[behavior]], and [[marriag
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  • ...]] in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_psychology_(psychology) social psychology]. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...applied [[science]], but can also be seen in the [[development]] of new [[social]] [[organizations]], [[institutions]] and [[relationships]]. Ingenuity invo [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • A '''persona''', in the [[word]] everyday usage, is a social role or a character played by an [[actor]]. This is an Italian word that de ...eople. Therefore, personae presented to other people vary according to the social environment the person is engaged in, in particular the persona presented b
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  • ...cessarily justify. For this reason, it has been the subject of study in [[psychology]], as well as a topic of interest in the [[supernatural]]. ..., who argue that appeals to intuition must be informed by the methods of [[social science]].
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  • ...he [[love]] of [[play]]ing.[1] This form of motivation has been studied by social and [[education]]al [[psychologists]] since the early 1970s. [[Research]] h Social [[psychological]] [[research]] has indicated that extrinsic rewards can lea
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  • ...o general [[theory]] of interpersonal compatibility has been proposed in [[psychology]]. Existing concepts are [[contradictory]] in many details, beginning with * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_psychology_(psychology) Social psychological] [[research]] on similarity of interests and [[attitudes]]
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  • ...wn near [[extinction]]. The more sympathetic among these [[Social Sciences|social scientists]] have also proposed that the lack of predation on Womb Planet--
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  • ...ipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_revolution cognitive revolution] that influenced psychology in general had a decisive effect on the study of attitudes. As a result, so ...and behavior. Still, not all the lack of consistency could be explained by social factors. Some factors had to be intrinsic to the individual. Therefore, som
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  • ...roduct of mass [[society]], is a distrust toward professed [[ethical]] and social [[values]], especially when there are high [[expectations]] concerning soci ...pursuit of virtuous, and thus [[happy]], lives. In rejecting conventional social values, they would [[criticise]] the types of [[behaviours]], such as [[gre
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  • ...trics psychometrics], and is used in [[Psychology|behavioral sciences]], [[social sciences]], marketing, product management, operations [[research]], and oth
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  • ...ng, where one's [[experience]] is lesser, in either a [[relative]] view to social [[peers]], or by an [[absolute]] comparison to a more common [[normative]] ...course]] or baseline qualifications for entry into another, [[different]], social experience. Since experience is the prime factor in determining a person's
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  • .... It has continued to be used in contemporary [[theoretical]] writing in [[psychology]] and [[philosophy]]. ...fundamental personality trait according to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology psychological theory].
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  • ...and national differences in character, on the basis of associationistic [[psychology]]. This use of the [[word]] was never adopted.) ==Differences and similarities with comparative psychology==
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  • ...wide range of [[utopia]]s. Bloch locates utopian projects not only in the social and political realms of the well-known utopian theorists (Marx, Hegel, Leni ...val, and [[spirituality]]. This approach incorporates contributions from [[psychology]], [[anthropology]], [[philosophy]] and [[theology]] as well as classical a
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  • ...of [[Personal identity (philosophy)|personal identity]] and an [[Identity (social science)|identity]] where the individual has some sort of comprehension of ...stages defined eight stages that describes how individuals relate to their social world. [[James W. Fowler]]'s stages of faith development is seen as a holis
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  • ...athematical equation that explains why popular people are involved in more social circles than unpopular people. These are not the only two research examples *Fiske, S. T. (2004). Social beings: A core motives approach to social psychology. United States of America: Wiley.
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  • ...is a construct of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_psychology social psychology], but has an extensive reach and influences [[literature]] in the fields of [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...hes of its [[mores]] – sexual immorality – by means of formal and informal social [[control]]. Interdictions and taboos among [[primitive]] societies were ar [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...logical]] adult [[development]], [[law]], [[personal]] [[character]], or [[social status]]. These [[different]] aspects of adulthood are often inconsistent a [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...ilt]] and [[crisis]], severe loss of [[personal]] productivity, as well as social disapproval for not meeting [[responsibilities]] or [[commitments]]. These [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • All modern [[society|social]] institutions arise from the [[evolution]] of the primitive [[custom]]s of ...and control in social cognition." In Wyer RS, Srull TK (ed.s), Handbook of social cognition: Vol. 1 Basic processes, pp. 1–40. Hove: Lawrence Erlbaun Assoc
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  • ...dia in 1999, was [[controversial]] in its time, but by 2006, the effect of social media and new [[internet]] technologies became broadly [[accepted]]. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...ia.org/wiki/Testosterone testosterone] are believed to affect sex drive; [[social]] factors, such as [[work]] and [[family]], also have an impact; as do inte [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...[sociolinguistics]] looks at the relation between linguistic variation and social structures. ...iences is highly interdisciplinary and draws on work from such fields as [[psychology]], [[informatics]], [[computer science]], [[philosophy]], [[biology]], [[hu
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  • .... He also offers an evolutionary rationale for why the subjective sense of social isolation--loneliness--is so profoundly disruptive to human physiology that ...re the individual is emotionally isolated, but may have a well functioning social network.
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  • ...unctional family was not taken seriously by [[professional]]s (therapists, social workers, [[teachers]], [[counselor]]s, clergy, etc.) especially among the m [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • While tantrums may be seen as a predictor of [[future]] [[anti-social behaviour]], in another sense they are simply the result of [[frustration]] [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ==Social behavior== ...also be a sign of [[fear]]. The study of smiles is a part of gelotology, [[psychology]], and [[linguistics]], comprising various [[theories]] of affect, [[humor]
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  • ...stern [[culture]], for example, greater masculinity usually brings greater social status. Many [[English]] [[words]] such as [[virtue]] and virile (from the ...of socialization to better match a culture's [[mores]]. The corresponding social condemnation of excessive masculinity may be expressed in terms such as "ma
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  • ...the [[law]], so as to maintain [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_order social order], is retained, the importance of rehabilitation is also given priorit [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...an be similar or exact to that of childhood but less overlooked because of social constructs, [[dogmas]], and norms. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...horndike] used the term [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_intelligence social intelligence] to describe the skill of [[understanding]] and managing other *[https://www.edutopia.org/social-emotional-learning Overview on Social-Emotional Learning], Edutopia
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  • ...communities have started to form since the advent of the [[Internet]] and social media. The most prolific and well-known of these [[communities]] has been t [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...es of trust are a subject of ongoing [[research]]. In [[sociology]] (and [[psychology]]) the degree to which one party trusts another is a measure of [[belief]] A second perspective in social theory comes from the classic Foundations of Social Theory by James S. Coleman. Coleman offers a four-part definition:
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  • ...pharmacology]], [[neurobiology]], nursing, dentistry, physiotherapy, and [[psychology]]. Pain medicine is a separate subspecialty[8] figuring under some medical ...ical pain is also linked to various cultural, religious, philosophical, or social issues.[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain]
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  • ...ations, and the scope of applications of legitimate evaluations across the social world. When put into [[practice]], these views are meant to explain our vie ==Psychology==
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  • 99:4.2 [[Social]] [[leadership]] is transformed by [[spiritual]] [[insight]]; [[religion]] 99:4.4 No matter what [[upheavals]] may attend the [[social]] and [[economic]] [[growth]] of [[civilization]], [[religion]] is genuine
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  • ...community]], and may enable or underscore the passage between religious or social states. ...monstration of respect or submission, stating one's affiliation, obtaining social acceptance or approval for some event — or, sometimes, just for the pleas
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  • ...n]] pagans, who modeled their relations with the gods on [[political]] and social terms, scorned the man who constantly trembled with [[fear]] at the thought ==Superstition and psychology==
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  • ...osite sex"; it also refers to "an [[individual]]’s sense of personal and [[social]] [[identity]] based on those [[attractions]], behaviors [[expressing]] the ...t [[inherent]] in [[biologic]] [[evolution]], but it is the basis of all [[social]] [[evolution]] and is therefore certain of continued [[existence]] in some
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  • ...''' is a [[failure]] of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_intelligence social intelligence] in which a person is easily tricked or [[manipulated]] into a [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • In [[psychology]], '''self-esteem''' reflects a person's overall evaluation or appraisal of 2. In the mid 1960s Morris Rosenberg and social-learning theorists defined self-esteem in terms of a stable sense of person
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  • ==Psychology== ...ty]]. Those patients "would like, with their passion disconnected from any social bond, to keep the doctor at their mercy." This relation of subjugation, com
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  • ...nfants become attached to adults who are [[sensitive]] and responsive in [[social]] [[interactions]] with the infant, and who remain as [[consistent]] caregi [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...and bones, caused by various traumatic [[events]]. In [[speech]] and in [[social]] settings, insults are [[words]] which tend to injure or damage the [[psyc [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...emed by the user themself to their individual [[health]], mental state, or social life.[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Addiction] [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ==In psychology== ...e]] matter in the formation of these factors, the more jealousy can have a social and cultural [[origin]]. By contrast, Goldie (2000, p. 228) shows how jealo
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  • ...ns]] of children increased dramatically in Europe. This did not impact the social [[attitude]] to children much, however. ...erg maintain, has not produced a new era of childhood. Obviously, numerous social, cultural, and political economic factors have operated to produce such cha
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  • ...John T. & William Patrick (2008) Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social Connection, W.W. Norton & Co., New York. ISBN 978-0-393-06170-3 [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...man potential and what it means to be [[human]], derives from humanistic [[psychology]]. ...ght]]s into what it means to be fully human, the cornerstone to humanistic psychology. The [[text]]s date back to antiquity, yet continue to shape understanding
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  • ...r abnormal development, by learning difficulties, and by [[problems]] in [[social]] [[adjustment]]. *Difficulty learning [[social]] rules
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  • ...wing]] any other [[mind]], [[human]] or [[superhuman]]. [[Religion]] and [[social]] [[consciousness]] have this in common: They are predicated on the [[consc ...astronomy]], [[physics]], [[chemistry]], [[biology]], [[sociology]], and [[psychology]]. [[Spiritual]] [[experience]] is the real [[soul]] of man's [[cosmos]].
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  • ...n a society is considered normal. People who do not go along are violating social norms and will invite a sanction, which may be positive or negative, from o ...C.G. (1966). The Problem of the Attitude-Type, in Two Essays on Analytical Psychology, Collected Works, Volume 7 Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISB
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  • ...erceived]] deficiencies, such as a lack of [[confidence]] or [[fear]] of [[social]] situations. [[Conflict]] can also be an internal source of frustration; w [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...usness" (Lajoie and Shapiro, 1992:91). Issues considered in transpersonal psychology include spiritual self-development, peak or [[mysticism|mystical experience ...d aspects of the spiritual and transpersonal in their work, transpersonal psychology for the most part has been overlooked by psychologists who are focused on t
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  • In evolutionary [[psychology]] and in cognitive [[neuroscience]], patience is studied as a [[decision]]- ...han tamarins. This [[difference]] cannot be explained by life [[history]], social [[behaviour]] or [[brain]] size. It can, however, be explained by feeding [
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  • ...ished over a hundred articles and several books on the role of the body in social interaction. ==Social significance==
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  • ...rminates is the [[moral]] [[nature]] that so early gives [[origin]] to a [[social]] [[consciousness]]. The first promptings of a child's [[moral]] [[nature]] 103:2.5 The [[psychology]] of a child is [[naturally]] [[positive]], not [[negative]]. So many [[mor
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  • '''Betrayal''' is the breaking or violation of a presumptive social contract, [[trust]], or [[confidence]] that produces [[moral]] and [[psycho [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...wever, viewed the most important area within semiotics as belonging to the social sciences: ...social life. It would form part of social psychology, and hence of general psychology. We shall call it semiology (from the Greek semeîon, 'sign'). It would inv
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  • ...t for the activity itself".[1] This form of motivation has been studied by social and educational psychologists since the early 1970s. [[Research]] has found Social psychological research has indicated that extrinsic rewards can lead to ove
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  • *3a : not fictitious : real <positive social tensions> :b : [[active]] and effective in [[social]] or [[economic]] [[function]] rather than merely maintaining [[peace]] and
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  • In some cases where there are [[legal]], [[religious]] or [[social]] restrictions on two people having [[physical]] [[intimacy]], there may ev [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...ea that [[natural]] systems ([[physical]], [[biological]], [[chemical]], [[social]], [[economic]], [[mental]], [[linguistic]], etc.) and their properties, sh Social scientist and physician [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_A._Christak
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  • ...s the [[process]] of deflecting sexual [[instincts]] into acts of higher [[social]] valuation, being "an especially [[conspicuous]] feature of cultural devel [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • '''Empowerment''' refers to increasing the [[spiritual]], [[political]], social or [[economic]] strength of [[individuals]] and [[communities]]. It often i ...meanings, interpretations, definitions and [[disciplines]] ranging from [[psychology]] and [[philosophy]] to the highly commercialized Self-Help industry and Mo
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  • ...needs to develop a relationship with at least one primary caregiver for [[social]] and emotional development to occur normally. Attachment theory [[explains ...come attached to [[individuals]] who are [[sensitive]] and responsive in [[social]] [[interactions]] with them, and who remain as [[consistent]] caregivers f
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  • ...he United States of America [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_security social security] is an entitlement program. [https://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10609044 In clinical [[psychology]] and [[psychiatry]], an unrealistic, exaggerated, or rigidly held sense of
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  • ...n's [[physical]] [[environment]] entails the battle for [[existence]]; the social surroundings necessitate [[ethical]] adjustments; the moral situations requ ...owship]]: the [[physical]] or [[material]] level of self-preservation; the social or [[emotional]] level of fellowship; the moral or [[duty]] level of [[reas
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  • ...g that highly sensitive persons can also be highly sensitive to favourable social cues and respond with traits of extroversion.[9] ...presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Memphis, TN. Summary by Aron (2006): "A functional study comparing brain a
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  • ...e. One popular social psychological theory of leisure was put forward by [[psychology]] professor John Neulinger in the early 1970s. Neulinger defined leisure us ...er. (2005). "The time-pressure illusion: Discretionary time vs free time". Social Indicators Research 73 (1), 43–70. (PDF file)
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  • *1853 WHEWELL [[Grotius]] I. 309 Social ties are to be extended more widely by diffusing our relationships. ...groups]] and [[society]] as a whole. Although [[humans]] are fundamentally social creatures, interpersonal relationships are not always healthy. Examples of
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  • ...he top .1%, i.e. three standard deviations or greater, among [[peers]]. In psychology, the inventor of the first IQ tests, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_ ...quent value. Quetelet [[discovered]] that the bell-shaped curve applied to social [[statistics]] gathered by the French government in the course of its norma
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  • ...uality of Life''' is used by politicians and economists to measure broader social effects of policies, such as the effect that reducing graffiti or vandalism ...nes and scales, and recent work on subjective well-being (SWB) surveys the psychology of happiness have spurred renewed interest" [1].
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  • ...ht]] or somatic anxiety. Another type of anxiety, [[stranger]] anxiety and social anxiety are caused when people are apprehensive around strangers or other p [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...tic [[individual]] has an [[absence]] of interest or concern to emotional, social, or [[physical]] life. They may also exhibit an insensibility or sluggishne ...developed a sense of disconnected numbness and indifference to [[normal]] social interaction.
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  • # Davies, Martin (2000). The Blackwell encyclopaedia of social work. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 245. ISBN 9780631214519. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...Eastern religious [[concepts]] such as Buddhist [[mindfulness]], and in [[psychology]]. Religions and psychological treatments often suggest the path of accepta ===Social acceptance===
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  • ...ural [[anthropologist]] Ruth Benedict, shame is a violation of cultural or social [[values]] while [[guilt]] feelings arise from violations of one's internal ...'s actions must be revealed to others. In the field of [[ethics]] (moral [[psychology]], in particular), however, there is debate as to whether or not shame is a
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  • '''Identity''' is a term used throughout the [[Social Sciences|social sciences]] to describe an individual's comprehension of him or herself as a ...or herself both as a person and in relation to other people. In cognitive psychology, the term "identity" refers to the capacity for self-reflection and the awa
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  • ...an interdisciplinary medical field [[studying]] the [[relationships]] of [[social]], [[psychological]], and [[behavioral]] factors on [[bodily]] [[processes] ...d [[management]] involving [[diverse]] specialties including psychiatry, [[psychology]], neurology, surgery, allergy, dermatology and psychoneuroimmunology. Clin
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  • In general, psychodynamics, also known as dynamic psychology, is the study of the interrelationship of various parts of the [[mind]], [[ In mate selection psychology, psychodynamics is defined as the study of the [[force]]s, motives, and ene
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  • ...However, [[proof]] of paternity has been intrinsically problematic and so social rules often determined who would be regarded as a father e.g. the [[husband *[https://www.gotateenager.org.uk Got a teenager] - Social networking website for parents of teenagers by Parentline Plus. Visit for a
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  • ...of the 20th century, cybernetics is equally applicable to [[physical]] and social (that is, [[language]]-based) [[system]]s. ...modeling, evolutionary [[biology]], neuroscience, [[anthropology]], and [[psychology]] in the 1940s, often attributed to the Macy Conferences.
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  • ...[[psychology]] produces a counterbalance of its [[opposite]]; the want of social [[humiliation]] and self-abrogation, basically [[desires]] entailing variou
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  • ...tility.[2] Guilt and its causes, merits, and demerits are common themes in psychology and psychiatry. It is often associated with [[anxiety]], and sometimes [[de ...on]], guilt can be manipulated to control or influence others. As a highly social animal living in large groups that are relatively stable, we need ways to d
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  • ...rectly by, for example, the evolutionary or developmental shaping of human psychology, or directly through, for example, people assessing and debating the likely ...rs"). According to this view, ethics is more a summary of [[common sense]] social decisions.
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  • ...reduced to [[psychology|psychological]] or [[biology|biological]] factors. Social facts have a meaning of their own, they are 'sui generis'.
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  • There is a social conception of discourse that is often linked with the work of French philos ===The social conception of discourse===
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  • *obedience to social norms; ...[[human]] owners. Obedience training seems to be particularly effective on social animals, a category that includes [[human being]]s; other animals do not re
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  • ...quality]] of [[idea]]s generated. Because of such problems as distraction, social loafing, evaluation apprehension, and production blocking, brainstorming gr There are four basic rules in brainstorming. These are intended to reduce the social inhibitions that occur in groups and therefore stimulate the generation of
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  • ...ls]] also [[experience]] the world [[differently]], resulting in certain [[social]] and [[emotional]] issues. The work of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazi [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • A '''stereotype''' is a commonly held [[public]] [[belief]] about specific social [[groups]] or [[types]] of [[individuals]]. The [[concepts]] of "stereotype ...ession, engraved mark" hence "solid impression". The term, in its modern [[psychology]] sense, was first used by Walter Lippmann in his 1922 work [https://en.wik
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  • ...ong-forgotten ‘grumblings’ in lectures when you expressed the opinion that psychology is an inaccurate science, an at-times-boring subject, espoused by those who “We now consider the ‘third factor,’ which is education and environment; the social structure within which an individual is brought up at first, and later matu
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  • ...f the world. They diverge from the [[arts]] and [[humanities]] in that the social sciences tend to emphasize the use of the [[scientific method]] in the stud ...thodology. Examples of boundary blurring include emerging disciplines like social studies of [[medicine]], [[neuropsychology]], [[bioeconomics]] and the hist
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  • ...f an offspring.[1] Because of the complexity and differences of a mothers' social, cultural, and religious definitions and roles, it is challenging to define ...other than the biological parent, especially if she who fulfills the main social role in raising the child. This is commonly either an adoptive mother or a
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  • ...honoris) is the evaluation of a [[person]]'s [[trust|trustworthiness]] and social [[status]] based on that [[individual]]'s espousals and [[actions]]. Honour #Nisbett, Richard E., and Dov Cohen. Culture of Honor: The Psychology of Violence in the South. Westview, 1996. ISBN 0-8133-1993-5.
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  • ...toration of civil relations after periods of oppression) brought the wider social-political concept of reconciliation back into prominence in Christian [[thi ...er a new [[discipline]], of peace studies has been a result of the renewed social and political interest in the concept of reconciliation.
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  • ...acking in sanity". Fromm argued that one of the most deceptive features of social life involves consensual validation[1]: [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...one of the earliest forms of entertainment. Narrative may also refer to [[psychology|psychological]] processes in self-[[identity]], [[memory]] and [[meaning]]- ...nical fields including medicine, narrative can refer to aspects of human [[psychology]].[https://web.lemoyne.edu/~hevern/narpsych/nrintro.html]. A personal narra
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  • ...coined by [[Indra Sen]]) and Psychotherapy that emerges from it. (Integral Psychology: Yoga, Growth, and Opening the Heart, SUNY, 2007 ISBN 0791470717). Althoug ...eas such as business, [[education]], medicine, [[spirituality]], sports, [[psychology]], and psychotherapy. The theme of the evolution of [[consciousness]] has
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  • ...the study of some fundamental questions about the methods and concepts of psychology and psychiatry, such as the meaningfulness of [[Sigmund Freud|Freudian]] co ...hilosophical study of some basic concepts, methods, and presuppositions of social sciences such as [[sociology]] and [[economics]].
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  • ...omething as complex as the inner workings of a [[human being]] or even the social [[pattern]]s of a nation. It is the alternative to working separately in [[ ...ts: The Foundations of Cooperation in Economic Life (Economic Learning and Social Evolution''). MIT 2005
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  • ...disorder of [[brain|neural]] development that is characterized by impaired social interaction and [[communication]], and by restricted and repetitive [[behav ...ioral or cognitive intervention can help autistic children gain self-care, social, and [[communication]] skills, there is no known cure.[9] Not many children
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  • ...motives, social roles, [[language]] and [[symbols]] is the ‘means by which social and cultural continuity are attained’ (Clausen 1968: 5). ...per by George Simmel [[concept]] was incorporated into various branches of psychology and anthropology (1968: 31-52).
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  • In [[psychology]], '''self-esteem''' reflects a [[person]]'s overall evaluation or appraisa *In the mid 1960s Morris Rosenberg and social-learning theorists defined self-esteem in terms of a stable sense of person
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  • ...linary study of [[mind]] and [[intelligence]], embracing [[philosophy]], [[psychology]], artificial intelligence, neuroscience, [[linguistics]], and [[anthropolo ...ied the existence of mind. According to behaviorists such as J. B. Watson, psychology should restrict itself to examining the relation between observable stimuli
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  • ...their fellows. [[Religion]] requires no [[definition]]; we all know its [[social]], [[intellectual]], [[moral]], and [[Fruits of the Spirit.|spiritual fruit ...y the [[laws]] of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiology physiology], [[psychology]], and [[sociology]].
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  • ...quite common. Commonly used terms, which are essentially synonymous within psychology, are "resilience", "psychological resilience", "[[emotional]] resilience", ...he other hand, is considered in a demonstration of manifested behaviour on social competence or success at meeting any particular tasks at a specific life st
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  • ...[[organizations]] are themselves advertising and promulgating on worldwide social [[media]] just what they are doing. ...r [[Mother Spirit]] and I are aware of the broad spectrum of political and social ideas put forward on how to confront this.
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  • Personality cannot very well perform in isolation. Man is innately a social creature; he is dominated by the craving of belongingness. It is literally [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...[[group]] or social network. In this way, personal fears are compounded by social influence to become [[mass hysteria]]. ...most afraid of two things: the threat of pain or death, and the threat of social rejection or isolation.
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  • ...''The Evolution of Integral Consciousness''.; [[Bahman Shirazi]] "Integral psychology, metaphors and processes of personal integration" in Cornelissen (ed.) ''C ...]], [[Sri Aurobindo]], and [[Abraham Maslow]] <ref> Ken Wilber, ''Integral Psychology'', Shambhalla, 2000 p.78</ref>
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  • ...contradictions, ‘ideology’ still plays a key role in semiotics oriented to social, political life" [https://www.semioticon.com/seo/I/ideology.html#]. ...line L'Engle]]. [[Noam Chomsky]] and [[Edward S. Herman]] have argued that social ideological homogeneity can be achieved by restricting the [[metaphor]]s tr
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  • ...e Ego Defence Mechanisms is to protect the mind/self/ego from [[anxiety]], social sanctions or to provide a refuge from a situation with which one cannot cur The ''superego'' forms as the child grows and learns [[parental]] and [[social]] [[standards]]. The superego consists of two [[structures]]: the [[conscie
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  • ...an interdisciplinary science that involves other [[disciplines]] such as [[psychology]], [[computer science]], [[statistics]], [[physics]], [[philosophy]], and [ ...mbined with sophisticated [[experimental]] [[techniques]] from cognitive [[psychology]] allows neuroscientists and psychologists to address [[abstract]] question
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  • ...ed a number of attributes that correlate with happiness: relationships and social interaction, extraversion, marital status, employment, [[health]], democrat ===Positive psychology===
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  • ...lines and their methodologies including [[anthropology]], [[sociology]], [[psychology]], [[philosophy]], and [[history]] of religion. ...ristian religions and spirituality coupled with convergence of the work of social scientists and that of scholars of religion as factors involved in the rise
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  • ...one's environment. It is a subject of much research in philosophy of mind, psychology, neuroscience, and cognitive science. ...t filtered through his unconscious conditioning – a ‘reality’ that western psychology calls ‘projection’ (i.e., of the contents of the unconscious). Every in
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  • ...tered therapy|client-centered]] approach. Counselors attend to both normal social, cultural and developmental issues as well as the problems associated with For context to the history of counseling see [[Timeline of psychology]] and [[Timeline of psychotherapy]]. Each of the articles in See Also below
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  • ...al sciences. [[Economics]], [[sociology]], [[anthropology]], demography, [[psychology]], city planning, and history of science came of age as autonomous universi "University, The." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Ed. William A. Darity, Jr.. Vol. 8. 2nd ed. Detroit: Macmillan Re
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  • ...me sex; "it also refers to an [[individual]]'s sense of [[personal]] and [[social]] identity based on those attractions, behaviors expressing them, and membe [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...es and social cohesion within a shared geographical location, generally in social units larger than a household. :3. Social intercourse; fellowship, communion.
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  • ...of anger.[9] Displays of anger can be used as a manipulation strategy for social influence.[10][11] ==Psychology==
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  • ...universally taught in the schools, as well as promulgated in our different social and religious organizations. ...ght adjuster” because we can be given discrete thoughts that supersede all social and ecclesiastical authority. Just think what it would mean for every indiv
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  • ...igned dramas which left significant emotions unresolved, as a way to force social action upon the audience. In Brecht's theory, the absence of a cathartic re ...istinction" (1992:57). The Greek nosos embraces both physical sickness and social ills. This was first used by Mike St. Pierre in his epic novel "uncomming p
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  • ...ts]] which tend to be suppressed collectively, because of the social and [[psychology|psychological]] costs of not doing so. Like all other observers, I too have
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  • ...ght reform,” and the “systematic [[manipulation]] of [[psychological]] and social [[influence]]”) refers (according to Michael Langone) "to a [[process]] i ...deprivation, psychological harassment, inculcation of [[guilt]], and group social [[pressure]]. The term punned on the Taoist custom of "cleansing/washing th
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  • ...HPD are distinguished from other personality disorders by their need for [[social]] [[approval]] and [[affection]] and by their willingness to live in accord [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ===Topic: ''Truth About Decimation, Murder Suicide Psychology''=== ...e feet, they are the presence of the spiritual universe at work within the social groupings of mankind. Their main concern is to serve the will of the Father
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  • ...vincing [[evidence]] of this [[spiritual]] [[certainty]] consists in the [[social]] [[Fruits of the Spirit.|fruits of the spirit]] which such believers, fait 102:6.8 To [[science]] [[God]] is a possibility, to [[psychology]] a desirability, to [[philosophy]] a [[probability]], to [[religion]] a [[
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  • * Jungian psychology: [[coincidence|Coincidence]]s that seem to be [[meaningfully]] [[related]]; ...overning dynamic that underlay the whole of human experience and history — social, emotional, psychological, and [[spiritual]]. Events that happen which appe
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  • ...m sense perceptions of the shared world. The term is technically used in [[psychology]] for the process of reviving in the [[mind]], [[perception]] of objects fo ...ility to imagine one's self in another person's place is very important to social relations and understanding. Albert Einstein said, "Imagination…is more i
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  • ...[[here and now]] must be viewed as being in [[chaos]], political chaos, [[social]] and religious disorder, [[economic]] [[uncertainty]], but from this regre ...rness to each other. Cherubim are always in pairs at their common task - [[psychology]] for these two.
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  • ...ended as a practical [[joke]] or to cause [[embarrassment]], or to provoke social or political [[change]] by raising people's [[awareness]] of something. It [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...rch, David Geary found that ''g'' is highly correlated with many important social outcomes.<ref> Geary, D. C. (2005). ''The origin of mind: Evolution of brai ...nce Reframed: Multiple Intelligences for the 21st Century.] ''Contemporary Psychology,'' ''46'', 5-7.
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  • ...is healthy and - in fact - essential for helping children reach important social, emotional, and cognitive developmental milestones as well as helping them Many of the most prominent researchers in the field of psychology (including Jean Piaget, William James, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung and Lev Vyg
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  • ...the [[discipline]]'s study and treatment of mental disorders in humans. [[Psychology]] examines emotions from a scientific perspective by treating them as menta ...logy]], emotions are examined for the role they play in human [[society]], social patterns and interactions, and culture. In [[anthropology]], the study of
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  • A founding member of the Association of Humanistic Psychology, Ferguson published and edited the well-regarded science newsletter ''Brain ...sophy "working its way increasingly into the nation's cultural, religious, social, economic and political life" (''[[New York Times]]'').
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  • ...mpt to [[study]] the [[phenomena]] of [[religious]] [[reactions]] to the [[social]] [[environment]], but never can it [[hope]] to penetrate to the real and i
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  • ...ughout history, eugenics has been regarded by its various advocates as a [[social responsibility]], an altruistic stance of a society, meant to create health ...can scientists and thinkers prompted a backlash in the public. The Swedish Social Democratic Party created the world's second largest eugenics program, which
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  • ...d benefits of forgiveness have been explored in religious [[thought]], the social sciences and medicine. * Lampert, K.(2005); Traditions of Compassion: From Religious Duty to Social Activism. Palgrave-Macmillan; ISBN 1-4039-8527-8
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  • ...life of the mind. Second, “intellectuals” as a recognizable occupational [[social class|class]] consisting of lecturers, professors, lawyers, doctors, scient ...ishment lay intelligentsia is one of the more significant phenomena of the social history of Germany in the 1830s', and that '... three or four theological g
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  • ==PAPER 99: THE SOCIAL PROBLEMS OF RELIGION== ...n]] was the endeavor to replace [[evil]] with [[good]] within the existing social order of [[political]] and [[economic]] [[culture]]. [[Religion]] has thus
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  • ...t was, prior to this practice. There was a sharing which I felt was a nice social piece of the meeting. But I feel that the [[learning]] aspects have increas ...interested in your [[assessment]] of the use of time where there was the [[social]] [[sharing]], quite personal at times, which time slot is now taken up wit
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  • ...collectively as the visual system, and are the focus of much research in [[psychology]], [[cognitive science]], [[neuroscience]] and [[molecular biology]]. ...rder to prove this. He pioneered the [[Science|scientific]] study of the [[psychology]] of visual perception, being the first scientist to argue that vision occu
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  • ...s also been identified by Robin Dunbar an evolutionary biologist as aiding social bonding in large [[group]]s.[3] ...ssion of scandals. Some newspapers carry "gossip columns" which detail the social and personal lives of celebrities or of élite members of certain communiti
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  • ...rst, of course, it is with your body. Then some of you get into a personal psychology and realize that you have these mental processes going on all the time. Yet ...ent types of identification with a certain group, a certain sex, a certain social class, a certain political party or political outlook, a certain country, a
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  • ...teachers]] in the [[Teaching Mission]] are now employing what our recent [[psychology]] has discovered which is that feelings are tied to [[belief]] systems and ...epressed is because it is raining and the ballgame is ruined. But the new psychology says that the reason people are depressed is because of the [[meaning]] of
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  • ...aviour]] generally, including [[language]] and [[pattern]]s of [[speech]], social institutions, and [[ritual]] behaviours (such as religious ceremonies, poli ...for social theory. For Habermas, hermeneutics is one dimension of critical social theory.
    17 KB (2,358 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...within the [[Social Sciences]] it often refers to specifically [[Sociology|social]] differences, known as ''gender roles'' in the [[Biology|biological]] scie or, by extension, to natural, innate qualities and their consequent social distinctions
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  • ...known as moral absolutism. Moral absolutists might concede that forces of social conformity significantly shape moral decisions, but deny that cultural norm ...ons. For instance ''humanity'' includes ''[[love]]'', ''kindness'', and ''social [[intelligence]]''.
    34 KB (4,967 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • ...d amount of father-child involvement has also proven to increase a child's social stability, [[education]]al achievement, and even their potential to have a ...ood. However, proof of paternity has been intrinsically problematic and so social rules often determined who would be regarded as a father, e.g. the husband
    15 KB (2,263 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...in the realm of [[belief]], the realms of [[theology]], [[philosophy]], [[psychology]], and many other [[disciplines]] that you are familiar with, but all of th ...e very well, the [[inner life]], your outward [[manifestations]] in your [[social]] endeavors, a [[future]] time when such [[experience]] is more broadly man
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  • ...tory'' generally is the [[research]] of [[artist]]s and their cultural and social contributions.[https://www.mobilemuseumofart.com/education/Connections.pdf] ...e and the creation, in turn, affect the course of artistic, political, and social events?''
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  • ...no ultimate inside and outside to your experience. No matter how much your psychology wants to split things into an objective world and then an inner subjective ...lays performed, all the whole history of human literature, philosophy, and psychology. It’s all the plastic arts, the painting and sculpture. All this is a sha
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  • ...ciation of understanding with the former [[personality]] types is due to a social [[phenomenon]] for asymmetrical distribution of gratification. In the field [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • *Chafe, William H., "The American Woman: Her Changing Social, Economic, And Political Roles, 1920-1970", Oxford University Press, 1972. [[Category: Psychology]]
    7 KB (1,115 words) - 02:42, 13 December 2020
  • ...G. (2006). The evolutionary psychology of facial beauty. Annual Review of Psychology, 57, 199-226. ...ilia groups sexual creatures into species, promotes stasis, and stabilizes social behaviour. J. theor. Biol. 144, 15-35
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  • ...brew (רוח) ''ruah''), as opposed to ''[[anima]]'', translating ''[[Psyche (psychology)|psykhē]]''. The word was loaned into [[Middle English]] via [[Old French] # The loyalty and feeling of inclusion in the social history or collective essence of an institution or group, such as in [[scho
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  • ...n tends to be forgotten in casual thought about love; it can be found in [[psychology]]. Unrequited love can be romantic, if only in a comic or tragic sense, or ...ou consent to marry us" implies that the marriage means the removal of the social obstacle between the two opposing families, not that marriage is sought by
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  • ...neral processes which produce such goods and give them meaning, and to the social relationships and practices in which such objects and processes become embe ...heory of culture that conceptually distinguishes between the material, the social, and the normative, nor does it reflect three competing theories of culture
    36 KB (5,216 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...neral processes which produce such goods and give them meaning, and to the social relationships and practices in which such objects and processes become embe ...heory of culture that conceptually distinguishes between the material, the social, and the normative, nor does it reflect three competing theories of culture
    36 KB (5,226 words) - 23:47, 12 December 2020
  • ...It encompasses [[human]], [[politics|political]], [[culture|cultural]], [[social]], and [[economics|economic]] aspects. While the major focus of human geogr *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_geography Social geography]
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  • ...[1527]]), sees power as "a complex strategic situation in a given society [social setting]". Being deeply structural, his concept involves both constraint an ...sely resembles what everyday [[English language|English]]-speakers call "[[Social influence|influence]]", although some authors (like D. Wrong) make a sharp
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  • ...possibly use and, if you look at child psychology and developmental child psychology, you see that we—this world—is socially very primitive, very, very chil ...situation on this planet? Just as every Democratic government has a set of social policies, foreign policies, and domestic policies, what are the policies an
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  • *2. ''[[Social]]-judgment—[[ethical]] choice''. ...te]] for genuine [[religious]] [[experience]]—[[spiritual]] [[reality]]. [[Psychology]] and [[idealism]] are not the [[equivalent]] of religious [[reality]]. The
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  • ...ancient by human standards, and well aware of the fact that spiritual and social changes in the vastly different Urantia populations occur only very slowly. ...he lives around it, the environment, the future of medicine, science, yes, psychology, teaching, art, commerce, politics and family life, and more, yes, more. Ho
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  • ...ned animals is also presumed to be for pleasure, which in turn strengthens social bonds. ...hers from Scotland who reported their findings in the journal ''Biological Psychology'', a significant health benefit of sex is lower blood pressure and overall
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  • ...n you genuinely worry about what is happening with others. You see their social, political, and economic difficulties that do appeal to your heart. ...rientation your parents had. Really open yourself up to all the various social and political viewpoints that are now available to you in your mass media.
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  • ...their fellows. [[Religion]] requires no [[definition]]; we all know its [[social]], [[intellectual]], [[moral]], and [[Fruits of the Spirit.|spiritual fruit ...y the [[laws]] of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiology physiology], [[psychology]], and [[sociology]].
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  • ...which often create drama by showing cases where human desire is impeded by social conventions, class, or cultural barriers. As well, it is used in other lite ===Psychology and neurology===
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  • '''Leadership''' has been described as the “[[process]] of social influence in which one [[person]] can enlist the aid and support of others ...ctions]]: the leader must provide for the well-being of the led, provide a social organization in which people feel [[relative]]ly secure, and provide a set
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  • ...popular. Spiritualism had attracted adherents who had strong interests in social [[justice]], and many trance mediums delivered passionate speeches on aboli ...e Laboratory for Advances in Consciousness and Health in the Department of Psychology at the University of Arizona
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  • ...nications]] and [[cultural studies]], although these are often regarded as social sciences. Scholars working in the humanities are sometimes described as "hu ...However, in modern [[academia]], history is increasingly classified as a [[social science]], especially when [[chronology]] is the focus.
    21 KB (3,123 words) - 00:24, 13 December 2020
  • ...uman race rests within each individual. So let me explain that all of your social organizations, from the smallest to the largest, the reality is the individ ...istory of the planet here, the evolution of society, government, different social institutions, gives you a wonderful feeling of all the hundreds of stages m
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  • ..., Oklahoma City, OK, United States), is an American author who writes on [[psychology]], [[philosophy]], [[mysticism]], [[ecology]], and [[spiritual]] [[evolutio ...nd spirituality and show how they integrate with theories of developmental psychology, such as Spiral Dynamics. His book, ''Boomeritis'' (2002), is a novel which
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  • ...te response to a people who have been deprived of proper parental care and social structure.
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  • ...tive perspective or definition of creativity. And unlike many phenomena in psychology, there is no standardized measurement technique. ...buted variously to [[divine]] intervention, [[cognitive]] processes, the [[social]] environment, [[personality]] traits, and [[chance]] ("accident", "[[seren
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  • ...ding to which empirical laws and explanations in "special sciences" like [[psychology]] or [[geology]] are invisible from the perspective of basic [[physics]]. ===Marx's Social Materialism===
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  • ...irst “Mad Scientists and Artists Party,” a three-day gathering convened by social visionary [[Marilyn Ferguson]] at a friend’s estate south of [[San Franci
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  • ...uch extreme [[standards]] as they become perpetually [[false]]. And this [[psychology|psychological]] [[conflict]] is unhealthy and even [[dangerous]] because it ...aintaining wide [[intellectual]] interests and [[understandings]] and wide social interaction guards quite effectively against that kind of thing.
    19 KB (3,028 words) - 23:19, 12 December 2020
  • ...roduced in 19th century [[philosophy]] by [[Franz Brentano]] in his work ''Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint''. Brentano defined intentionality as one cha ...f intentionality states that every mental [[phenomenon]] (that is, every [[psychology|psychological]] act) has a content, and is directed at an object (the ''int
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  • 103:1.1 The [[unity]] of [[religious]] [[experience]] among a [[social]] or racial [[group]] derives from the [[identical]] [[nature]] of the [[Go ...rminates is the [[moral]] [[nature]] that so early gives [[origin]] to a [[social]] [[consciousness]]. The first promptings of a child's [[moral]] [[nature]]
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  • ...cs of domestic buildings in particular regions or localities, and the many social and cultural factors that have contributed to their evolution. ...tetrahedral and close-packed-sphere geometries, thermodynamics, chemistry, psychology, biochemistry, economics, philosophy and theology. Despite a few mainstream
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  • ...es share the same common ancestor. The main difference between them is the social organization: [[matriarchal]] for the Bonobo and [[patriarchal]] for the Co ...ese changes are related and what their role is in the evolution of complex social organization and culture are matters of ongoing debate.(''How Humans Evolve
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  • Politics consists of "social relations involving [[authority]] or [[power]]" [https://dict.die.net/polit ...hints at two of the five types of power recognized by [[social psychology|social psychologists]]: '''incentive power''' (the power to reward) and '''coerciv
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  • social and political life especially. It is how you become a citizen of the world Now, very recently shall we say, with the advent of special disciplines like psychology
    20 KB (3,590 words) - 12:12, 24 January 2021
  • ...at you are loved, and thus you are of service to each other even in your [[social]] [[contact]]. I have spoken of this in other lessons as to how it is human ...you can give. [[Michael]] [[studied]] [[mankind]] without ever taking a [[psychology]] class, and he grew in [[wisdom]] as to how to instruct his fellows in the
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  • ...ere do we start? So many different schools of religion, or philosophy, or psychology, say you are this or you are that, but they don’t particularly define wha ...iousness, let’s call this your ego although, again, almost every school of psychology has a slightly different definition. Let’s just say your ego is who you
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  • Mrs. P: Conation n. (from [[Philosophy]] and [[Psychology]]) 1. The [[mental]] faculty or power of striving or [[effort]], whether or Mrs. P: From [[philosophy]] or [[psychology]], the mental faculty or power of striving or [[effort]], whether or not co
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  • ...empires, on to some of the recognizable, more modern nations, so too your social consciousness expanded from your family and immediate neighborhood, to your ...riences of people before the disciplines of science and the discoveries of psychology.
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  • ...nd has something to offer the field of science. There was a time when even psychology was regarded as voodoo nonsense, but it is now regarded as Mindal Science a ...d as theology but when you set out to study someone else’s religion, it is psychology. What makes them tick? What makes them think that way? Why do they believe
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  • ...to solve it, limits of complexity are measured using a term from cognitive psychology, namely the hrair limit. ...cial complexity that is often related to the use of computer simulation in social science, i.e.: computational sociology.
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  • ...heir own [[content]]. Collective Intelligence draws on this to enhance the social pool of existing [[knowledge]]. Henry Jenkins, a key theorist of new media ...ltation in a late majority institution'. Organisational Transformation and Social Change, 3, 4, 317–332.
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  • ...demands of you.) Social architect. Yes. That is correct. It is as if a social architect culled together a number of like-minded people, kindred spirits i ...a need for a morality story, a parable of some kind, a moment of armchair psychology, or a look into your methods of ministry to discern where you might improve
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  • ...demands of you.) Social architect. Yes. That is correct. It is as if a social architect culled together a number of like-minded people, kindred spirits i ...a need for a morality story, a parable of some kind, a moment of armchair psychology, or a look into your methods of ministry to discern where you might improve
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  • .../dow/ Dreams of Wholeness]: A course of introductory lectures on religion, psychology and personal growth (Hong Kong: Philopsychy Press, 1997/2008), see especial ...l, transcendent definition of evil, or whether evil is determined by one's social or cultural background. C. S. Lewis, in ''The Abolition of Man'', maintaine
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  • ...s tradition, while the Marxist derives his thought from a body of critical social and economic thought, and the post-structuralist's work emerges from twenti ...ddressing concerns of early reader-response and numerous psychological and social approaches. His approach, laid out in his [[Anatomy of Criticism]], was exp
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  • ...y preventing them from meeting their basic needs, often leading further to social conflict and violence. Competition is essential to social progress, but competition, unregulated, breeds violence. In current [[socie
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  • ...sponse]] to loss, it also has [[physical]], [[cognitive]], [[behavioral]], social, and [[philosophical]] [[dimensions]]. Common to human [[experience]] is th ...sociated with reward. It is one that has also been shown to play a role in social attachment, such as sibling and maternal affiliation.[6][7]
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  • ...hael and Mother Spirit, We find ourselves evermore deeply immersed in both social and political moral evaluations, and so we ask your help. We ask you, Mothe ...ence and planing over quite a period of time, carry out such horrific anti-social acts.
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  • ...world situation the way it is, the news being what it is, even your own [[social]] circles being what they are, even the [[Teaching Mission]] itself [[plagu ...[perceptions]]. They are a way of interjecting your perceptions into the [[social]] arena in order to try them on for size, in order to find out who is with
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  • ...ve been appealing to them with our message of peace, social stability, and social sustainability. ...hat of service and of profit-making that is compliant and assisting of the social, environmental and economic benefit or helpfulness of individuals, families
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  • ...ged and beautiful context. It is the manner and means of physical, mental, social and spiritual development if rightly encompassed. ...e suffering and torment of both. Many of the more modern understandings of psychology clarify the extreme suffering that the tormentor experiences to the point o
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  • ...waking state to hyperexcitability. A psychiatrist who subscribes to depth psychology sees waking consciousness as the mere tip of the iceberg, the rest being co ...iences or other forms of intrapsychic conflict. The prevailing view in the social sciences, however, is that the unconscious is more primitive and undevelope
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  • RO: Abraham, in the western [[psychology]] of [[discipline]], much of the self-degradation, the patterns of self-deg ...] and efforts into trying to mask over or dwell on the negative from the [[social]] point of view. I feel a little reluctant because I am no [[authority]]. C
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  • ...d. Goodness is the only nurturing value that will give your civilizations social progress, emotional evolution, and spiritual unfoldment. These are part of ...er, when their society does not know or understand the distinctions of the psychology or the genetic preferences that are involved in their body—their gender b
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  • ...this in terms of individual human rights being recognized by the enlarging social groups. All this is a bit of a digression to explain Urantia’s spiritual ...er, the planetary prince Caligastia. I call to your mind that some of your social religions and philosophies have long made the observation, and then taught,
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  • ...reciate this: interestingly enough, a number of years ago people exploring psychology came up with an isolation booth containing a liquid that totally negated th ...differently about? This is what we tease you with. It is critical in your social and political lives where you are constantly bombarded with other people’
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  • ...risdictions. [[self-awareness]], [[individual]]ity, and a sense of [[self (psychology)|self]] that persists through time. Other views centre around the degree to :* [[social construct|Certain societal constructs]] - certain social entities, are considered legally as persons, for example some [[corporation
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  • ...s can also cause stress, such as struggles with difficult individuals and social defeat, or relationship [[conflict]], deception, or break ups, and major ev ...(1999) Putting Stress in Life: Hans Selye and the Making of Stress Theory Social Studies of Science, Vol. 29, No. 3 (Jun., 1999), pp. 391-410
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  • ...re-ness” of reality, because every personal being has this “in here.” Your psychology might kind-of poo-poo it and call it mere subjectivity, but this is your li ...if you’re not of that denomination. Besides that, if there are no regular social clubs of different organizations and things--you talk about not being able
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  • ...become more restful and you enter into a [[transition]], a [[Transpersonal Psychology|trans-personal]] [[experience]] may develop, or not. You feel “other tha ...ults. It is important that this equality be existent and operative on a [[social]] level in the [[family]] to be achieved, and in your larger [[society]].
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  • ...and the early part of the twentieth century, that there came about a great social illusion: that by eliminating the so-called spiritualist phenomena of super ...equally valid dimensions of mind and the importance of understanding human psychology. Beyond this, there is a reaching out for a deeper understanding of what sp
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  • ...and the early part of the twentieth century, that there came about a great social illusion: that by eliminating the so-called spiritualist phenomena of super ...equally valid dimensions of mind and the importance of understanding human psychology. Beyond this, there is a reaching out for a deeper understanding of what sp
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  • ...nications]] and [[cultural studies]], although these are often regarded as social sciences. ...ttps://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1035752,00.html] and of unseen psychology by [[Sigmund Freud|Freud]], [https://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/modsbook36
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  • ...d that is what would lean you to/ incline you to think you were being anti-social or [[selfish]] to be seeking the company of your own Indwelling [[Adjuster] ...h a travesty [[endure]]? How [[shame]]-based that must prevail within your social [[consciousness]]. Such an awesome sense of [[responsibility]] must permeat
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  • ...peaceful society. As we have talked about so many times, there is so much social and political power that comes to the rulers and the leaders of society who *(Social evolution may be delayed, but it is spiritually inexorable)
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  • ...ntempt may frequently be one of the emotions experienced by [[privilege]]d social classes or castes against the [[oppressed]] class or caste. [[Category: Psychology]]
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  • ...eterminism which holds the view that the physical environment, rather than social conditions, determines [[culture]]. Those who believe this view say that hu ...emergentist or generative philosophy, cognitive sciences and evolutionary psychology, argue that free will does not exist.[14][15] They suggest instead that an
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  • ...or]] and the [[belief]] of their adherents. In this way, religion became [[social]] order and has remained so for countless [[generations]]. The many churche ...to be caught up in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_psychology mass psychology] of many people for one thing. The sheer numbers overawe many people and ma
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  • ...is best done when your belief system is moral and ethical, and you have a social conscience that you have learned. This allows the Creator the greatest opp We are not advocating that you throw away all of your social restraints and social responsibilities to explore this, as then you would abandon the path of dev
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  • ...pt]) and other [[phenomena]] and cultural [[units]]. It has been used in [[social science]] to [[understand]] the [[processes]] by which societies and [[grou
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  • The [[curriculum]] is first, one of [[Profound|deep]] [[psychology|psychological]] probing. It is not [[design]]ed to make you instantly feel social or [[economic]] [[status]], [[state|national]] [[origin]], or [[religious]]
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  • ...ch nearly everyone will have the need for such technology for economic and social reasons.[https://archives.betterhumans.com/Columns/Column/tabid/79/Column/2 ...chard: Testing alleged mediumship: Methods and results. British Journal of Psychology (2005), 96, 165–17.
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  • ...health]], and how we relate to the material world and its [[political]], [[social]], and religious [[institutions]]? Are there boundaries or is the [[guidanc ...‘trippy' or ‘spacey'. We are wondering if this has an [[physical]] or a [[psychology|psychological]] cause. I asked his permission to ask you this question, Ham
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  • ...al]] endowment, they may enjoy [[environments]] exceptionally favorable to social advancement and [[moral]] [[progress]], or they may suffer from the lack of 5:1.5 However [[Urantia]] mortals may differ in their [[intellectual]], [[social]], [[economic]], and even [[moral]] opportunities and endowments, forget no
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  • ...ny other [[animal]] on the [[planet]]. In addition, much of your modern [[psychology]] has correctly taught you that a large part of your [[mind]] is also [[unc ...nd involved in near incessant [[warfare]]: at that [[stage]] of immature [[social]] [[culture]] very little [[individuality]] can--[[literally]]--be afforded
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  • ...ntributions to literary studies, anthropology, linguistics, psychology and social and cultural theory, this creates a tendency to see him as belonging to one ...tributions to literary studies, anthropology, linguistics, psychology, and social and cultural theory, his thinking extends beyond these disciplines as Bakht
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  • ...ence, but also [[library science]], [[cognitive science|cognitive]], and [[social sciences]]. ...lly, information science emerged in the 19th Century along with many other social science disciplines. As a science, however, it finds its institutional roo
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  • ...as such, is not merely a [[moral]] [[movement]], albeit the outward and [[social]] [[manifestations]] of religion are mightily [[influenced]] by the [[ethic ...man mind], and as far as such an [[experience]] is definable in terms of [[psychology]], it is simply the [[experience]] of experiencing the [[reality]] of belie
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  • ...personal]] [[honor]], [[family]] [[love]], [[religious]] [[obligation]], [[social]] [[duty]], and [[economic]] [[necessity]]. ...tal]] men as the [[ideal]] of [[personal]] religious living? Indeed, the [[social]] readjustments, the [[economic]] [[transformations]], the [[moral]] rejuve
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  • ...tal mind about things that go bump in the night. The entire field of human psychology and religion as well are teeming with action and commerce surrounding the i JACK: Well, I would suggest that you ask the social architects to gather around you a group of like-minded individuals, like-mi
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  • ...power) and the organisation principle (cybernetic power) (2). Hierarchical social organisation has perfected itself by desacralisation and mechanisation, but ...pressed exist. The struggle against nature, and then against the different social organisations of the struggle against nature, is always the struggle for hu
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  • ...d and dissolved/digested. You are reminded how all of the larger political/social units came about through conquest, right up to the nations of the present d ...been the story of mankind. Don’t forget, my children, as we talk about the social/political development of tribes into larger units, finally into the nation
    21 KB (3,861 words) - 20:22, 26 December 2010
  • ...analysis also covers modern [[idea]]s of mental causation involving such [[Psychology|psychological causes as [[volition]], need, motivation, or motives; [[ratio ====Psychology====
    44 KB (6,801 words) - 01:03, 13 December 2020
  • ...call it, works. It is actually a little more [[complex]] than your human [[psychology]] has discovered at this point in time. Many [[waves]] of mindal activity a ...e]]. This is a highly evolved civilization that has eradicated many of the social [[problems]] that you [[experience]]. It is more of a [[heaven]] on earth e
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  • ...important for my children, and really for the better understanding of the psychology of this even--especially since this going to be written down. So I thank Yo ...mental phenomena, so far empirically limited to your single planet as the psychology of the human race--all these billions of individuals, how they think and be
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  • ...on of power on its head. You have Lord Acton’s famous dictum, referring to social and political power, that power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absol ...at works. Welcome the feedback you will get. Learn from them. What is this psychology you’re encountering?
    31 KB (5,576 words) - 18:30, 26 December 2010
  • *''Social myths'' reinforce or defend current social values or practices. ...individuals," and that the purpose of myths in this view is to allow the "social order" to establish "its permanence on the [[illusion]] of a natural order.
    23 KB (3,525 words) - 01:40, 13 December 2020
  • ...me say that some of your more rousing [[discourse]] on [[political]] and [[social]] and so forth issues was, as you would equate, a football game, for we wer ...o the matter of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminology criminology], [[psychology]], [[behavior]] modification and so forth. Quite a [[study]] was done, and
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  • This echoes your prayer of being free from those enslaving past traditions of social and cultural usage which have more negative impact than positive. Some go b ...needed the more enslaved lower classes. Each needed the other in a kind of social contract that could only be superseded ever so gradually as each individual
    24 KB (4,395 words) - 13:54, 27 December 2010
  • ...tages of Faith]” by James Fowler. Fowler taught a form of developmental [[psychology]] to seminary students at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emory_University E ...scope of his writing is vast and there is much we could say regarding his social and political thought, his philosophy of [[science]], and his taxonomy of t
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  • ...change everywhere, especially in these living bodies of yours, and all the social and political things, as well as the advances in your science and technolog ...nd unlike everyone else’s. But the extent of that degree is enormous. Your psychology explores this difference between within and without and calls the inner one
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  • ...group. In the clothes they’re wearing, think of all that says about their social class and culture, perhaps further defining their age and demonstrating the Some of you consider this pure psychology, still just a dimension of mind, disregarding those spiritual adjuncts of m
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  • ...t "instinct and utility between them can safely be trusted to carry on the social business of punishment and praise" regardless of metaphysical theories. He ...he "elbow room" believed to be necessary by libertarians. Free [[Volition (psychology)|volition]] is regarded as a particular kind of complex, high-level process
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  • ...call history, the origins of this human world you live in, especially your social/scientific world of cultural meaning and discovery. ...we see and appreciate every iota of culture of the planetary stage of the social/scientific world into which you are born--its influence upon you in all tho
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  • ...That concept was developed in the context of the political, economic, and social conditions of the ancient Near East. Although it has proven a resilient and It may be that God is necessary only from a [[Sociology|social]] or [[Psychology|psychological]] point of view; if that is the case, we may as well have a n
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  • ...not so much facile oversimplification as refusal to search further for the social origin of constraints. (Reich understood this well.) Oppression reigns beca ...ess which illumines both the demands of the will-to-live and the fate that social organisation has in store for them; living experience and its recuperation
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  • ...renaissance for a number of reasons, some having to do with the planetary social evolution that every world goes through at your stage of technological deve ...the divine that supersedes all ecclesiastical authority. So religious and social constructs of authority are breaking down, necessarily so if you are to hav
    42 KB (7,224 words) - 12:30, 23 December 2010
  • ...ogy has origins in the [[natural sciences]], the [[humanities]], and the [[social science]]s. (Wolf, Eric (1994) ''Perilous Ideas: Race, Culture, People.'' ' ...arly 20th centuries, social anthropology has been distinguished from other social science disciplines by its emphasis on in-depth examination of context, [[c
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  • ...ou are confused on this point for you feel we are asking you to accept the social injustices, the pain and suffering in the world, and taking this as a kind ...ction and doing nothing. It’s the humble realization you must first allow social reality to come into you, and register, and move you, to know what it is.
    33 KB (5,768 words) - 16:41, 26 December 2010
  • ...ories: stories of clever cheating, wit and ridicule levelled against hated social groups (or competitors among the storytellers). Much of the original genre ===Sentimentalism, psychology, and the new individual, 1750-1850===
    50 KB (8,118 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • # a method of treatment of [[Psychology|psychological]] or [[emotion]]al illness. (A Glossary of Psychoanalytic Ter ...an explanatory theory was the then unpublished ''Project for a Scientific Psychology'' in 1895. In this work Freud attempted to develop a neurophysiologic theor
    81 KB (11,571 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...rther separation of inner human reality into mind and spirit, if you will, psychology and religious experience. And while, historically, as mankind’s developin So often in these social and cultural contexts ignorant of or in doubt of some final unification, yo
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  • ...e]] might have been ill-timed since it happened smack in the middle of a [[psychology]] [[lecture]]. ...aused a [[stressful]] situation. It's one of those Band-aids they put on [[social]] situations as if to fix it, and it hasn't fixed it, it has only created a
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  • ...aking the Kingdom by storm] is not [[myth]], is not idle chatter, is not [[social]] [[grace]] but is made possible by your [[confidence]] in your [[supernal] .... I ask you to commit this [[idea]] to [[memory]], for history and human [[psychology]] has proved time and again that this is a great [[stumbling block]] toward
    25 KB (4,140 words) - 23:23, 12 December 2020
  • ...ence gave a lot of them a kind of rebirth and re-evaluation of some of the social norms and values all around them; gave them a kind of new outlook on things ...certain time as people struggle to find ever greater relationships between psychology and pharmacology, to understand ever and ever deeper the relationship of mi
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  • ...major underlying element of Far-East culture. It could be understood as a social [[ethic]] and [[Humanism|humanist]] system focusing on human beings and the ...y, they share the rudiments of Western "[[folk psychology]]": a sentential psychology and semantics, for example, belief and (propositional) knowledge, subject-p
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  • ...s. You do value and prize this consciousness itself. You do understand the psychology involved of how you have to be conscious of these prejudices to have a choi ...ying to put them in—racial, or cultural, sexual, even body type, clothing, social status. If you want, think of these as flavors this individual certainly ex
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  • ...th lessons that seem [[repetitive]], but it is my understanding of human [[psychology]] and the like. Many, many are the ways that need to have these [[thoughts] ...that Higher Guide, that there is happiness and contentment in all areas of social, economic, and physical strata. And so to say that only those who have 'mad
    26 KB (4,288 words) - 23:02, 12 December 2020
  • ...cticed in [[Western world|Western]] culture. (The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology 22|pages=pp. 149-166) ...ots through the [[hippie]]- [[Counterculture of the 1960s|counterculture]] social revolution of the [[1960s]] and [[1970s]] when many of the youth of the day
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  • ...ealm of being: the [[imagination]] and the study and the [[history]] and [[psychology]] and conceptual thinking. It is truly a [[universe]] to discover, right be ...roup]] consciousness and – not just political, not just cultural, not just social, but a general consciousness that has power over the individuals therein.
    25 KB (4,407 words) - 23:36, 12 December 2020
  • ...ain open-ended. Thus we might see the project of science, for example, or social formations, as ongoing or open-ended narratives, constituted by stories but ...mmatic description, which finds popularity in both literary circles and in psychology. Freytag suggested that story has a typical climactic linear plot, “…a
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  • ...der how friendship can help you bridge the other great gaps of culture and social class. ...ss gives you the ability to be a good friend. It is just a truism of human psychology that those who are too desperately in need of others, simply drive them awa
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  • ...oaching this from my view, the view of medicine and view of psychiatry and psychology in our world is not going to be the same as the viewpoint that you would pu ...an individual within the family. It is important that they understand the social dynamics in that situation, and as this individual is the father of these c
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  • ...and man in their [[nature]], the divine and the human. This has to do with social culture even though in our [[education]] we have found the [[value]]s in ou ...e I die God will tell me to write a book, I can do it! I am a Professor of Psychology and Philosophy writing is not unknown to me. I cannot do both at the same t
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  • ...], to co-ordinate these changes into your [[personal]] lives and into your social, [[political]], [[financial]], commercial lives as well. This is why the [[ ...as their elected officials. It will require you to re-invent many of your social [[institution]]s. The infrastructure is a reality that supports the develop
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  • ...usions or misidentifications may still be worthy of serious study from a [[psychology|psychosocial]] point of view. ...c by any means necessary because of the likelihood of widespread panic and social breakdown. [20]
    46 KB (6,890 words) - 02:42, 13 December 2020
  • ...ecies have also evolved. An extreme case is the [[Eusociality]] found in [[social insect]]s, such as [[bee]]s, [[termite]]s and [[ant]]s, where sterile insec ...evolutionary concepts are used in even more distant disciplines such as [[psychology]], [[medicine]], [[philosophy]] and [[computer science]].
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  • ...to discover because it is in the realm of human behavior and decisions and psychology that you will find the associations for sustainable organizations, sustaina ...will be effectively a tremendous breakdown in the institutions within our social and cultural environment, in order that there may be a breakthrough to a wh
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  • ...w human beings. In a parallel fashion you could choose to accept a greater social agreement on what is good, giving up your own personal notions of what woul ...ived mainly from dealing with physical reality. Mental reality and related psychology is something else. Essentially thought is just putting minutely detailed fe
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  • ...my concern for the planet and our systems of government, and dealing with psychology, and politics, and wars; and it seems like the whole planet is threatened b ...in a very true way just a speck in a gigantic happening, especially in the social way with all the other people, all the other unique beings you’re constan
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  • ...ntative of [[God]], and the intention of the message is always to effect a social change to conform to God's desired standards initially specified in the Tor Alternatively, social commentators who suggest escalating crisis in environment and society due t
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  • Karen: Yeah. Responsibility. Social contact. ...ain picked but I always enjoyed things that have to do with psychiatry and psychology and the mind and the aberrations of the mind, genesis of the mind, but I do
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  • ...nts, such as a perfect physician or flutist, a perfect comedy or a perfect social system. Hence the Greek "teleiotes" was not yet so fraught with abstract an ...rst, in accordance with the "order of the universe" ("ordo universi"). The social perfection is binding on man, whereas personal perfection is only becoming
    49 KB (7,737 words) - 22:37, 12 December 2020
  • ...fact so many of our lessons have been on the accidents of your birth--the social authority you were raised in, the whole culture you were given and from whi ...leads to what, not only physically—in your sciences, and mentally—in your psychology; but spiritual causes and effects too. You also can begin to feel/experien
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  • ...xistential mystery. In this rare moment, deep politics is all at once deep psychology and deep spirituality. ...nues. I observe that a quiet meeting of minds has been taking place across social classes and former political divisions, through means of communication othe
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  • ...d be remembered that a complete absence of terminology — related to modern psychology, biology and physics — existed during the evolution of mankind's sacred t ...familiar "[[Br'er Rabbit]] and the Tar Baby", for example, is fairly acute psychology wrapped in a children's tale. Humor of this sort is often corrupted into me
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  • ...sue regarding the relationship between verbal irony and [[sarcasm]], and [[psychology]] researchers have addressed the issue directly (e.g, Lee & Katz, 1998). Fo ...ures. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina College of Humanities and Social Sciences, 1987. 183-209.
    24 KB (3,775 words) - 01:23, 13 December 2020
  • ...his in many ways is the simplest form of prayer. Some have termed this the social approach to prayer.[https://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft8b69p1w7/] In this v ...test of the 'trance' and psychopathology hypotheses.' Journal of Abnormal Psychology: 1979 Aug Vol 88(4) 427-434.
    25 KB (3,680 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...also used in somewhat different [[context]]s in fields such as clinical [[psychology]] and sports training. ...hr'' for such malevolent purposes, then its assault on marital harmony and social [[justice]] probably influenced the contempt for which it is generally view
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  • feminist emphasis on the social formation of gender. It is easy to perceive The current status of this project, in collaboration with social scientist Dr
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  • ...follow a similar policy. They very rarely answer questions about politics, social issues, science, and other worldly matters. We must learn and earn our own ...s like "mass hysteria" or "multiple personality." The trouble is that most psychology that deals with mind dynamics is itself an art, hypothetical, or at the roo
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  • ...deas, ideals, and approaches to being. It is not hindered by convention or social structure. It is not diminished by intimidation. It is forthright in its ef ...the subconscious or universal mind as it is sometimes referred to in your psychology texts, in that the genetic mind has a peculiar focus on the accumulated bel
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  • ...nd its resurrection and transformation; and, in social rituals, to enhance social identity formation, group integration and cohesion and to reaffirm cultural ...ean by God, but it is still immanent in the total interconnected social systems and planetary ecology (Bateson 1978).
    57 KB (8,688 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...chers argue that a continuum exists among the communication methods of all social animals, pointing to the fundamental requirements of group behavior and the ...into what is real. The 20th century brought demands for [[symbolism]] or [[psychology|psychological]] insight in the delineation and development of character.
    35 KB (5,154 words) - 01:39, 13 December 2020
  • ...essary forms. With the upstepping of the [[energy]] of transmission, the [[social]] destabilization that results will [[ultimately]] lead to this end, that i *Psychology and Spirituality
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  • ...es and experimental psychology than of disciplines commonly categorized as social sciences. Among the latter, methods of verification and testing of hypothes Science is a social enterprise, and scientific work tends to be accepted by the community when
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  • ...o have joined forces in order to manipulate world political, economic, and social systems to facilitate their personal agenda. ...able undertaking that makes the Manhattan Project look like a kindergarten social party in comparison. And perhaps I'm exaggerating a bit for effect -- but I
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  • and the early part of the twentieth century, that there came about a great social dimensions of mind and the importance of understanding human psychology. Beyond
    46 KB (7,777 words) - 18:39, 5 May 2014
  • ...that await [[humanity]] in the fields of [[metaphysics]], [[cosmology]], [[psychology]], and [[genetics]]. ...his father, the ACIO was his shelter and [[sanctuary]], [[workplace]], and social venue.
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  • ...ces]], or [[synchronicity]]? Or is that a function of the [[human mind]]/[[psychology]], or wilful [[thinking]] as opposed to actual [[contact]]? ...g a world that has fallen into [[darkness]] and [[chaos]], [[necessary]] [[social]] [[adjustments]] must be made, and [[recognition]] of that which is less g
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  • ...not been [[promised]]. This is getting into a somewhat delicate area of [[psychology]], but it is a [[problem]] we have [[debated]] and discussed for many, many ...ccur as soon as this, but it has already had [[profound]] effects on the [[social]] life of [[this planet]].
    165 KB (27,992 words) - 22:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...healing all manner of ills. With his many degrees in [[Physiology]] and [[Psychology]], he recently proved to be a Linguist, as well. ...ut you’ve got the upper hand in this exercise, and you can instigate a new social consciousness, a non-threatening consciousness. That is one of the lures of
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  • power by which it is maintained in being. Afnan says that, ‘The psychology of nature. Detailed examination of peripheral social, religious and material achievements
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