Human Behavior in the Social Environment: A Social Systems ApproachAldine Transaction, 1990 - 283 pagine Since publication of the first edition of Human Behavior in the Social Environment in 1974, over 120,000 students have successfully used this classic text, which takes a social systems approach to human behavioraan approach that perceives connections between fields of practice, between methods, and across professional disciplines and bodies of theory. Completely revised and updated, this fifth edition reflects awareness of the role of varied cultural and ethnic features within the social environment, and recognizes the importance of the lengthened lifecycle. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 38
Pagina 17
... achieve better ego orientation to reality , thus heightening the likelihood of achieving goals , is yet another example . According to some observers , President Reagan's greatest achievement may have been a symbolic reintegration of ...
... achieve better ego orientation to reality , thus heightening the likelihood of achieving goals , is yet another example . According to some observers , President Reagan's greatest achievement may have been a symbolic reintegration of ...
Pagina 35
... achieving goals ( GI , GE ) . This process of securing energy or expending it to achieve goals can be done in either a coercive or coopera- tive fashion . The system can secure energy or achieve goals coercively either by threatening ...
... achieving goals ( GI , GE ) . This process of securing energy or expending it to achieve goals can be done in either a coercive or coopera- tive fashion . The system can secure energy or achieve goals coercively either by threatening ...
Pagina 111
... achieve its goals was shown to be minimal . If the federal government's covert goal was political , its power to achieve its goals through the political sys- tem of Appalachia was quite effective . Power must thus be measured by its ...
... achieve its goals was shown to be minimal . If the federal government's covert goal was political , its power to achieve its goals through the political sys- tem of Appalachia was quite effective . Power must thus be measured by its ...
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Human Behavior in the Social Environment: A Social Systems Approach Ralph E. Anderson,Irl E. Carter Visualizzazione estratti - 1990 |
Parole e frasi comuni
achieve activities adaptation adolescence adult American aspects B. F. Skinner become boundaries bureaucracy Chapter characteristics child cities complex components concept conflict crisis culture cycle defined definition described differentiation discussion energy entropy environment Erikson Etzioni example expressed external family system feedback feelings formal functions goals hierarchy holon Homeostasis human system ideas identity important individual industrial institutions integration interac interaction internal leadership major Malcolm X means ment morphogenesis needs negentropy nonplace communities norms nuclear family occur one's organization organizational parents person Piaget Popenoe primary problem refers relationships responsibility Robert role sense social control social networks social systems society specific stage status steady structuralist structure subsystems suprasystem survival symbolic SYNTROPY systems approach systems theory systems thinking task territory theorists theory tion total institution ture Twelve Angry Men United University Press values Washington Monthly workers York youth