Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Africans in America Growth of Slavery in the 1600s and 1700s

CHAPTER 13 Trait Theories (p. 447) 1. b. 2. (a)ii, (b)iii, (c)iv, (d)v, (e)i. 3. e. Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic Theories (p. 455) 1. The conscious is the tip of the berg lettuce and the highest level of awareness the preconscious is just below the surface but tush readily be brought to awareness the unconscious is the large base of the iceberg and operates below the level of awareness. 2. b. 3. Freud believed an individuals adult personality refl ected his or her resolution of the specifi c crisis presented in each psychosexual stage (oral, anal, phallic, latency, and genital). 4. a) Adler, (b) Horney, (c) Jung, (d) Horney. human-centred Theories (p. 458) 1. a. 2. c. 3. self-actualization. 4. Humanistic theories are criticized for their naive assumptions, poor testability and inadequate evidence, and narrowness in merely describing, not explaining, behavior. Social-Cognitive Theories (p. 460) 1. how each individual thinks about the world and interprets experiences. 2. a. 3. c. 4. remote locus of control, internal locus of control. Biological Theories (p. 462) 1. d. 2. Some researchers emphasize the grandness of the unshared environment, while others fear that genetic eterminism could be misused to turn off certain ethnic groups are inferior, male dominance is natural, or that accessible progress is impossible. 3. b. 4. c. Personality Assessment (p. 469) 1. (a)ii, (b)i, (c)iii. 2. projective 3. b. 4. People accept pseudo-personality tests because they offer generalize statements that apply to almost everyone (Barnum effect), they notice and remember events that confi rm predictions and ignore the misses (fallacy of positive instances), and they cull information that maintains a positive self-image (self-serving bias).

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