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Social Psychology Module - Coggle Diagram
Social Psychology Module
Social Psychology
What is Social Psychology?
Social psychology is the science of conflict between the individual and society, Moscovisi argues.
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The phenomena of social communication designate the exchanges of linguistic languages between individuals and groups.
Historical Background of Social Psychology
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For some this crisis is due to the youth of the discipline, for others it is due to their particular way of establishing a discipline.
For others simply the lack of updating as a product of the two disciplines that gave rise to it: Psychology and Sociology.
Concept and Methodological Characteristics of Social Psychology
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Social psychology bases its entity on a style of analysis, fundamentally the social psychologist focuses his interest on those phenomena based on the existence of a continuum.
A process of what happens within an acting unit (be it a person or a community) and what happens between such units.
Role of Social Psychology
Social psychology is dedicated to identifying and defining the positions or positions that individuals adopt.
Social psychology, due to the phenomena it studies, has been used as a weapon in psychological warfare.
The psychosociologist studies the behaviors that are adopted in the social environment by individuals and societies.
The Individual
The Human Being Has Body and Soul
In the unity of body and soul, man, by his very bodily condition, is a synthesis of the material universe, which through man reaches the highest peak of it and raises his voice for the free praise of the Creator.
In a physical body subject to the biological laws of all living beings (birth, nutrition, growth, reproduction and death).
A soul, principle of movement of all living beings, which is different from other living beings since it is endowed with intelligence and will.
The Human Being is Individual
He is different from all the other members of the human species, that is, although he participates in the same nature, he constitutes a totality in himself.
He is a unity, which cannot be divided without perishing. It is made up of soul and body, spirit and matter, which in it form a substantial unit, the rupture of which is death.
The Human Being is Social
But the human being, being rational and individual, is not self-sufficient; he needs the help and care of other beings of his species.
He cannot live in isolation; he has to live in society in order to satisfy both his physical and spiritual needs.
Men, families, and the various groups that make up the civil community are aware of their own failure to achieve a fully human life and perceive the need for a larger community.
The Search for Good. The happiness
Man, being a social and rational animal by nature, seeks with other men to satisfy his needs.
There is in man an inclination to the good corresponding to his rational nature, an inclination that is specifically his.
Everything that refers to this inclination belongs to natural law, to banish ignorance, to avoid offenses with whom one should converse.
The Society
A society is a large number of human beings who work together to satisfy their social needs and who share a common culture.
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Social Life and its Consequences on the Individual
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Saves time and energy of individuals, developing and maintaining certain common patterns of behavior that members of society share and practice.
Society brings people together in time and space, making mutual human relationships possible.
It provides them with systematic and adequate means of communication, such as language and other common symbols to understand each other.
It provides a system of status and classes, so that each individual has a relatively stable and recognizable position in the social structure.
The link is an instrumental concept in social psychology, which takes a certain structure and is operationally manageable.
The bond is always a social bond, even if it is with a person through the relationship with that person a history of certain bonds is repeated in a certain time and in certain spaces.
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