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Understanding the self CBRC
92問 • 2年前
  • Twice Mikay
  • 通報

    問題一覧

  • 1

    A soul is "The actuality of a body that has life", where life means the capacity for self-sustenance, growth and reproduction.

    Aristotle

  • 2

    He insisted that the human being is a composite of body and soul, and that the soul cannot be separated from the body.

    Aristotle

  • 3

    According to _________ self-knowledge is important for one central reason: because it offers us route to greater happiness and fulfillment.

    Socrates

  • 4

    He mentioned that unexamined life is not worth living.

    Socrates

  • 5

    According to _______ self is fundamentally an intellectual entity whose nature exists independent from physical world; and the three parts of the soul are the rational, spirited and appetitive parts.

    Plato

  • 6

    the three parts of the soul are the ________ parts.

    rational, spirited and appetitive

  • 7

    According to ________, self - include the memory of the thinking thing. A person's memories provide a continuity of experience that allows him to identify himself as the same person.

    John locke

  • 8

    According to ________, emotions and sensations occur a few at a time, ever changing and never all exist equally all at once.

    David hume

  • 9

    He was a fierce opponent of Rene descartes, Rationalism.

    David hume

  • 10

    He made Empiricism - origin of knowledge is sense experience.

    David hume

  • 11

    It is origin of knowledge is sense experience.

    Empiricism

  • 12

    For ________, the human mind creates the structure of human experience.

    Immanuel kant

  • 13

    According to ________, "self" is transcendental, which means the "self" is related to a spiritual or non-physical realm. "Self" is not the body, but it is outside the body. Knowledge bridges the self and material things together.

    Immanuel kant

  • 14

    According to ______, the essence of existing as a human identify is the possibility of being self-conscious are mutually dependent on one another.

    Rene descartes

  • 15

    Cogito, ergo sum

    I think, therefore I am

  • 16

    He was most important contribution was psychoanalysis.

    Sigmund freud

  • 17

    He is three level of consciousness include conscious, pre-conscious/subconscious and unconscious.

    Sigmund freud

  • 18

    It is a personality theory based on the notion that unseen forces, controlled by the conscious and the rational thought, motivate an individual.

    Psychoanalytic theory

  • 19

    Three parts of the psyche or mind

    Id, ego and superego

  • 20

    It is parts of the psyche or mind that is pleasure principle.

    Id

  • 21

    It is parts of the psyche or mind that is the reality principle.

    Ego

  • 22

    It is parts of the psyche or mind that incorporates the values and morals of the society.

    Superego

  • 23

    The Id, Ego and Superego have most commonly been conceptualized as three essential parts of the

    Human personality

  • 24

    It is operated at an unconscious level according to the pleasure principle like gratification from satisfying basic instinct.

    Id

  • 25

    It develops from the id during infancy. It goals to satisfy the demands of the Id in a safe a socially acceptable way.

    Ego

  • 26

    In contrast to the Id, it follows the reality principle as it operates in both the conscious and unconscious mind.

    Ego

  • 27

    It operates on the morality principle and motivates us to behave in a socially responsible and acceptable manner.

    Superego

  • 28

    He wrote the Concept of Mind (1949) where he rejected the notion that mental states are separable from physical states. Mental processes are intelligent acts, and are not distinct from each other. The operation the mind is itself an intelligent act. Your own action define your own concept of self.

    Gilbert ryle

  • 29

    He built upon Freud's theory of psychosexual development by drawing parallels in childhood stages while expanding it to include the influence of social dynamics as well as the extension of psychosocial development into adulthood.

    Erick erickson

  • 30

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: Infancy period: Trust vs. Mistrust (Hope, withdrawal)

    Stage 1

  • 31

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: Early childhood period: Autonomy vs. Shame, doubt (Will, compulsion)

    Stage 2

  • 32

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: Play age period: Initiative vs. Guilt (Purpose, inhibition)

    Stage 3

  • 33

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: School age period: Industry vs. Inferiority (Competence, inertia and passivity)

    Stage 4

  • 34

    Stages of adolescence according to Erickson: Adolescence period: Identity vs. Identity confusion (Fidelity, Repudiation)

    Stage 5

  • 35

    Stages of adulthood according to Erickson: Young adulthood period: Intimacy vs. Isolation (Love, Distantiation)

    Stage 6

  • 36

    Stages of adulthood according to Erickson: Adulthood period: Generatvity vs. Stagnation/Self-absorption (Care, Rejectivity)

    Stage 7

  • 37

    Stages of adulthood according to Erickson: Old age period: Integrity vs. Despair (Wisdom, Disdain)

    Stage 8

  • 38

    He is known for the theory "theory of the Social self"

    George mead

  • 39

    It is a theory in which an abject consists only of a collection of properties. An object consists of its properties and nothing more. Hence, there can not be an object without properties nor can one even conceive of such an object.

    Bundle theory

  • 40

    Social learning theory is proponent by

    Albert bandura

  • 41

    It emphasizes the importance of observing, modelling and imitating the behaviors, attitudes and emotional reactions of others.

    Social learning theory

  • 42

    It considers how both environment and cognitive factors interact to influence human learning and behavior.

    Social learning theory

  • 43

    The enduring self refers to the notion that "You are the same person you were earlier in your life".

    Western view

  • 44

    It assumes that we humans are selves that endure through time.

    Western view

  • 45

    It despie the many mental and physical changes that may occur during our life, we are essentially the same 'self' throughout our many developments.

    Western view

  • 46

    There is 'no self', and that what we think of as a 'self' is just an illusion.

    Western view

  • 47

    The self as an entity separate from others.

    Western view

  • 48

    The 'self' represents something, which belongs to the thinking substance as an intuitive beginning of rational cognition, emphasizing it's independence.

    Western view

  • 49

    This view represents the self-confidence of the individual in the bourgeoisie society, which encounters the negation of the self.

    Western view

  • 50

    The self is often treated as an illusion.

    Eastern view

  • 51

    The self is conceived as a "relational self" - one which is intensely aware of the social presence of other human beings.

    Eastern view

  • 52

    The self is thus am obedient self, which follow the appeals of social requirements, rather than it's own needs.

    Eastern view

  • 53

    The ideal self, according to this doctrine, can be achieved through harmonization of one's everyday communication with other individuals in society at large.

    Eastern view

  • 54

    View the essence of human life as consisiting in suffering and asserts that this is caused by having a fallacious of the self: "The true self is permament and unchangin, the non-true self is impermanent and changes continually"

    Eastern view

  • 55

    "The self does not exist apart from the states of consciousness"

    Eastern view

  • 56

    It refers to a representation of oneself about him or herself.

    Political self

  • 57

    It is position based on the interest and perspective of one social organizations.

    Political

  • 58

    It is the conceptually discrete categories of 'inner' and 'outer' in reality constantly interact, shape and inform each other.

    Political self

  • 59

    It is legal, social or ethic principle of freedom or entitlement.

    Rights

  • 60

    It is fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal system, social convention or ethical theory.

    Rights

  • 61

    It is right to vote in public, political elections.

    Suffrage

  • 62

    It is right to vote in public, political elections.

    Political fanchise or simply fanchise

  • 63

    Right to vote

    Active suffrage

  • 64

    It is how people maintain extensions of themselves through material possessions and maintenance of particular lifestyles. In the context of what the society values as needs and wants.

    Economic self

  • 65

    It means earning a total family income at level that enables of family unit to support itself without receipt of cash assistance grant.

    Economic self-sufficiency

  • 66

    Synonymous with luxuries. People buy them for reason the do not warrant necessity.

    Wants

  • 67

    Synonymous with luxuries.

    Wants

  • 68

    These are important for survival. Food, clothing and shelter are basic needs, so people purchase them out of necessity.

    Need

  • 69

    These are important for survival.

    Needs

  • 70

    It is how we understand our bodies and how we understand our relationship.

    Sexual self

  • 71

    Basically a way to describe the feeling you have for someone you fancy or are attracted to.

    Sexual self

  • 72

    A person physically and emotionally attracted to someone of the opposite sex, so a male attracted to a female and a female atrracted to a male.

    Heterosexual

  • 73

    A person physically and emotionally attracted to someone of the opposite sex, so a male attracted to a female and a female atrracted to a male.

    Straight

  • 74

    A male physically and emotionally attracted to another male or a female physically and emotionally attracted to another female (more commonly used in males)

    Gay

  • 75

    A female physically and emotionally attracted to another female.

    Lesbian

  • 76

    People who are attracted to the same sex.

    Homosexual

  • 77

    It is often called gay

    Homosexual men

  • 78

    People who are attracted to the same sex.

    Gay or lesbian

  • 79

    It is called lesbians but can also be called gay.

    Homosexual women

  • 80

    People who are attracted to both male and female.

    Bisexual or bi

  • 81

    People who are attracted to other people regardless of their sex or gender identity.

    Pansexual

  • 82

    People who don't feel sexuality attracted to anyone and feel no desire to have sex.

    Asexual

  • 83

    People who don't feel sexuality attracted to anyone and feel no desire to have sex.

    Ace

  • 84

    Trust vs. Mistrust (Hope, withdrawal)

    Infancy period

  • 85

    Autonomy vs. Shame, doubt (Will, Compulsion)

    Early childhood period

  • 86

    Initiative vs. Guilt (Purpose, Inhibition)

    Play age period

  • 87

    Industry vs. Inferiority (Competence, Inertia, Passivity)

    School age period

  • 88

    Identity vs. Identity confusion (Fidelity, Repudiation).

    Adolescence period

  • 89

    Intimacy vs. Isolation (Love, Distantiation)

    Young adulthood period

  • 90

    Generativity vs. Stagnation or Self absorption (Care, Rejectivity)

    Adulthood period

  • 91

    Integrity vs. Despair (Wisdom, Disdain)

    Old age period

  • 92

    Right to stand for election.

    Passive suffrage

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    問題一覧

  • 1

    A soul is "The actuality of a body that has life", where life means the capacity for self-sustenance, growth and reproduction.

    Aristotle

  • 2

    He insisted that the human being is a composite of body and soul, and that the soul cannot be separated from the body.

    Aristotle

  • 3

    According to _________ self-knowledge is important for one central reason: because it offers us route to greater happiness and fulfillment.

    Socrates

  • 4

    He mentioned that unexamined life is not worth living.

    Socrates

  • 5

    According to _______ self is fundamentally an intellectual entity whose nature exists independent from physical world; and the three parts of the soul are the rational, spirited and appetitive parts.

    Plato

  • 6

    the three parts of the soul are the ________ parts.

    rational, spirited and appetitive

  • 7

    According to ________, self - include the memory of the thinking thing. A person's memories provide a continuity of experience that allows him to identify himself as the same person.

    John locke

  • 8

    According to ________, emotions and sensations occur a few at a time, ever changing and never all exist equally all at once.

    David hume

  • 9

    He was a fierce opponent of Rene descartes, Rationalism.

    David hume

  • 10

    He made Empiricism - origin of knowledge is sense experience.

    David hume

  • 11

    It is origin of knowledge is sense experience.

    Empiricism

  • 12

    For ________, the human mind creates the structure of human experience.

    Immanuel kant

  • 13

    According to ________, "self" is transcendental, which means the "self" is related to a spiritual or non-physical realm. "Self" is not the body, but it is outside the body. Knowledge bridges the self and material things together.

    Immanuel kant

  • 14

    According to ______, the essence of existing as a human identify is the possibility of being self-conscious are mutually dependent on one another.

    Rene descartes

  • 15

    Cogito, ergo sum

    I think, therefore I am

  • 16

    He was most important contribution was psychoanalysis.

    Sigmund freud

  • 17

    He is three level of consciousness include conscious, pre-conscious/subconscious and unconscious.

    Sigmund freud

  • 18

    It is a personality theory based on the notion that unseen forces, controlled by the conscious and the rational thought, motivate an individual.

    Psychoanalytic theory

  • 19

    Three parts of the psyche or mind

    Id, ego and superego

  • 20

    It is parts of the psyche or mind that is pleasure principle.

    Id

  • 21

    It is parts of the psyche or mind that is the reality principle.

    Ego

  • 22

    It is parts of the psyche or mind that incorporates the values and morals of the society.

    Superego

  • 23

    The Id, Ego and Superego have most commonly been conceptualized as three essential parts of the

    Human personality

  • 24

    It is operated at an unconscious level according to the pleasure principle like gratification from satisfying basic instinct.

    Id

  • 25

    It develops from the id during infancy. It goals to satisfy the demands of the Id in a safe a socially acceptable way.

    Ego

  • 26

    In contrast to the Id, it follows the reality principle as it operates in both the conscious and unconscious mind.

    Ego

  • 27

    It operates on the morality principle and motivates us to behave in a socially responsible and acceptable manner.

    Superego

  • 28

    He wrote the Concept of Mind (1949) where he rejected the notion that mental states are separable from physical states. Mental processes are intelligent acts, and are not distinct from each other. The operation the mind is itself an intelligent act. Your own action define your own concept of self.

    Gilbert ryle

  • 29

    He built upon Freud's theory of psychosexual development by drawing parallels in childhood stages while expanding it to include the influence of social dynamics as well as the extension of psychosocial development into adulthood.

    Erick erickson

  • 30

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: Infancy period: Trust vs. Mistrust (Hope, withdrawal)

    Stage 1

  • 31

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: Early childhood period: Autonomy vs. Shame, doubt (Will, compulsion)

    Stage 2

  • 32

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: Play age period: Initiative vs. Guilt (Purpose, inhibition)

    Stage 3

  • 33

    Stages of childhood according to Erickson: School age period: Industry vs. Inferiority (Competence, inertia and passivity)

    Stage 4

  • 34

    Stages of adolescence according to Erickson: Adolescence period: Identity vs. Identity confusion (Fidelity, Repudiation)

    Stage 5

  • 35

    Stages of adulthood according to Erickson: Young adulthood period: Intimacy vs. Isolation (Love, Distantiation)

    Stage 6

  • 36

    Stages of adulthood according to Erickson: Adulthood period: Generatvity vs. Stagnation/Self-absorption (Care, Rejectivity)

    Stage 7

  • 37

    Stages of adulthood according to Erickson: Old age period: Integrity vs. Despair (Wisdom, Disdain)

    Stage 8

  • 38

    He is known for the theory "theory of the Social self"

    George mead

  • 39

    It is a theory in which an abject consists only of a collection of properties. An object consists of its properties and nothing more. Hence, there can not be an object without properties nor can one even conceive of such an object.

    Bundle theory

  • 40

    Social learning theory is proponent by

    Albert bandura

  • 41

    It emphasizes the importance of observing, modelling and imitating the behaviors, attitudes and emotional reactions of others.

    Social learning theory

  • 42

    It considers how both environment and cognitive factors interact to influence human learning and behavior.

    Social learning theory

  • 43

    The enduring self refers to the notion that "You are the same person you were earlier in your life".

    Western view

  • 44

    It assumes that we humans are selves that endure through time.

    Western view

  • 45

    It despie the many mental and physical changes that may occur during our life, we are essentially the same 'self' throughout our many developments.

    Western view

  • 46

    There is 'no self', and that what we think of as a 'self' is just an illusion.

    Western view

  • 47

    The self as an entity separate from others.

    Western view

  • 48

    The 'self' represents something, which belongs to the thinking substance as an intuitive beginning of rational cognition, emphasizing it's independence.

    Western view

  • 49

    This view represents the self-confidence of the individual in the bourgeoisie society, which encounters the negation of the self.

    Western view

  • 50

    The self is often treated as an illusion.

    Eastern view

  • 51

    The self is conceived as a "relational self" - one which is intensely aware of the social presence of other human beings.

    Eastern view

  • 52

    The self is thus am obedient self, which follow the appeals of social requirements, rather than it's own needs.

    Eastern view

  • 53

    The ideal self, according to this doctrine, can be achieved through harmonization of one's everyday communication with other individuals in society at large.

    Eastern view

  • 54

    View the essence of human life as consisiting in suffering and asserts that this is caused by having a fallacious of the self: "The true self is permament and unchangin, the non-true self is impermanent and changes continually"

    Eastern view

  • 55

    "The self does not exist apart from the states of consciousness"

    Eastern view

  • 56

    It refers to a representation of oneself about him or herself.

    Political self

  • 57

    It is position based on the interest and perspective of one social organizations.

    Political

  • 58

    It is the conceptually discrete categories of 'inner' and 'outer' in reality constantly interact, shape and inform each other.

    Political self

  • 59

    It is legal, social or ethic principle of freedom or entitlement.

    Rights

  • 60

    It is fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal system, social convention or ethical theory.

    Rights

  • 61

    It is right to vote in public, political elections.

    Suffrage

  • 62

    It is right to vote in public, political elections.

    Political fanchise or simply fanchise

  • 63

    Right to vote

    Active suffrage

  • 64

    It is how people maintain extensions of themselves through material possessions and maintenance of particular lifestyles. In the context of what the society values as needs and wants.

    Economic self

  • 65

    It means earning a total family income at level that enables of family unit to support itself without receipt of cash assistance grant.

    Economic self-sufficiency

  • 66

    Synonymous with luxuries. People buy them for reason the do not warrant necessity.

    Wants

  • 67

    Synonymous with luxuries.

    Wants

  • 68

    These are important for survival. Food, clothing and shelter are basic needs, so people purchase them out of necessity.

    Need

  • 69

    These are important for survival.

    Needs

  • 70

    It is how we understand our bodies and how we understand our relationship.

    Sexual self

  • 71

    Basically a way to describe the feeling you have for someone you fancy or are attracted to.

    Sexual self

  • 72

    A person physically and emotionally attracted to someone of the opposite sex, so a male attracted to a female and a female atrracted to a male.

    Heterosexual

  • 73

    A person physically and emotionally attracted to someone of the opposite sex, so a male attracted to a female and a female atrracted to a male.

    Straight

  • 74

    A male physically and emotionally attracted to another male or a female physically and emotionally attracted to another female (more commonly used in males)

    Gay

  • 75

    A female physically and emotionally attracted to another female.

    Lesbian

  • 76

    People who are attracted to the same sex.

    Homosexual

  • 77

    It is often called gay

    Homosexual men

  • 78

    People who are attracted to the same sex.

    Gay or lesbian

  • 79

    It is called lesbians but can also be called gay.

    Homosexual women

  • 80

    People who are attracted to both male and female.

    Bisexual or bi

  • 81

    People who are attracted to other people regardless of their sex or gender identity.

    Pansexual

  • 82

    People who don't feel sexuality attracted to anyone and feel no desire to have sex.

    Asexual

  • 83

    People who don't feel sexuality attracted to anyone and feel no desire to have sex.

    Ace

  • 84

    Trust vs. Mistrust (Hope, withdrawal)

    Infancy period

  • 85

    Autonomy vs. Shame, doubt (Will, Compulsion)

    Early childhood period

  • 86

    Initiative vs. Guilt (Purpose, Inhibition)

    Play age period

  • 87

    Industry vs. Inferiority (Competence, Inertia, Passivity)

    School age period

  • 88

    Identity vs. Identity confusion (Fidelity, Repudiation).

    Adolescence period

  • 89

    Intimacy vs. Isolation (Love, Distantiation)

    Young adulthood period

  • 90

    Generativity vs. Stagnation or Self absorption (Care, Rejectivity)

    Adulthood period

  • 91

    Integrity vs. Despair (Wisdom, Disdain)

    Old age period

  • 92

    Right to stand for election.

    Passive suffrage