A. ethical dilemmas
B. opportunities for self-transcendence
C. crises of self-definition
D. all of the above
A. ethical dilemmas
B. opportunities for self-transcendence
C. crises of self-definition
D. all of the above
A. behavior based on sexual drives
B. thinkers prior to Freud who anticipated his ideas
C. thinkers opposed to psychoanalysis
D. thinkers influenced by Freud who have modified his ideas
A. they are based on a sophisticated definition of instinct
B. they emphasize sexual dysfunction
C. they stress the irrational
D. all of the above
A. corresponds to Freud,s”ego”
B. emerged before the “me”
C. eventually completely merges with the “me”
D. all of the above
A. the expressed judgment of one,s peers
B. the imagined judgments of others
C. the persons self-feeling such as pride
D. all of the above
A. occurs incidentally and unconsciously
B. involves acquiring a self-image
C. is less effective and easier to resist than childhood socialization
D. all of the above
A. one’s mother
B. shame
C. societal norms
D. analytic internalization
A. view the same experiences differently
B. arrive at a common view point through discussion
C. perceive the same events in the same way
D. pretend to disagree when they really agree
A. Charles Horton Cooley
B. Sigmund Freud
C. George Herbert Mead
D. Jean Piaget
A. the absence of instincts
B. the need for love
C. the need for body contact
D. all of the above