Human Behavior in the Social Environment: A Social Systems ApproachAldine Publishing Company, 1974 - 183 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 78
Pagina 21
... example , members of a family are distinguished not only by blood relationships , but also by frequency and intensity of personal contact . A neighbor would usually be considered outside the boundary , but might become " a member of the ...
... example , members of a family are distinguished not only by blood relationships , but also by frequency and intensity of personal contact . A neighbor would usually be considered outside the boundary , but might become " a member of the ...
Pagina 22
... example , a child may be less open to interaction with his peers than he " should " be , and more open to inter- action solely with his parents than is expected at his age . Community organizers might wish for a social agency to be more ...
... example , a child may be less open to interaction with his peers than he " should " be , and more open to inter- action solely with his parents than is expected at his age . Community organizers might wish for a social agency to be more ...
Pagina 41
... example , the paranoid person is not able , or is not allowing himself , to participate in this feedback cycle with outside systems , and must rely on his own imagined judgments . It was argued during the 1972 presidential election that ...
... example , the paranoid person is not able , or is not allowing himself , to participate in this feedback cycle with outside systems , and must rely on his own imagined judgments . It was argued during the 1972 presidential election that ...
Sommario
THE SOCIAL SYSTEMS APPROACH | 6 |
CULTURE AND SOCIETY | 30 |
COMMUNITIES AND ORGANIZATIONS | 45 |
Copyright | |
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achieve activity adaptation adolescence adult aspects B. F. Skinner basic become biological boundary bureaucracy capacity chapter characteristics child complex components concept conflict crises crisis culture cycle defined definition described differentiation dimension discussion effect energy entropy environment equilibrium Erikson Etzioni example expression family system feedback feelings focal formulation Freud functions goal attainment hierarchy holon Homeostasis human behavior human system idea identification identity important individual institutions integration interaction internal Kurt Lewin leadership Malcolm X means Miller morphogenesis needs neo-Freudians norms nuclear family one's open marriage organization organizational parents particular patterns peer group person perspective Piaget primary problems psychological refers relationships role schemas sense sexual Sigmund Freud social control social systems society specific stage status steady structure studies subsystems superego suprasystem symbols system goals systems approach systems model systems theory task term territory theorists tion units Warren G York