In this presentation, academic scholar, John Slifko includes key research findings in cognitive science from Mark Johnson's book, "Moral Imagination: Implications of Cognitive Science for Ethics" to reveal how imagination has an essential role in ethical deliberation. By a ‘Moral Law theory’ Johnson shows how every aspect of morality is imaginative— our fundamental moral concepts, our understanding of situations, and our reasoning about those situations are all imaginatively structured and based on metaphor.
In this presentation, academic scholar, John Slifko includes key research findings in cognitive science from Mark Johnson's book, "Moral Imagination: Implications of Cognitive Science for Ethics" to reveal how imagination has an essential role in ethical deliberation. By a ‘Moral Law theory’ Johnson shows how every aspect of morality is imaginative— our fundamental moral concepts, our understanding of situations, and our reasoning about those situations are all imaginatively structured and based on metaphor.
This is a powerpoint presentation of one of the Senior High School Core Subject: Personal Development. For this powerpoint, this serves as a presentation about the topic of the definition of psychology, psychiatry and the proponents of psychology.
Spiritual Intelligence: The ability to behave with wisdom and compassion, while maintaining inner and outer peace regardless of the situation.
Spiritual Intelligence must show up in our actions an our behaviors.
This is a powerpoint presentation of one of the Senior High School Core Subject: Personal Development. For this powerpoint, this serves as a presentation about the topic of the definition of psychology, psychiatry and the proponents of psychology.
Spiritual Intelligence: The ability to behave with wisdom and compassion, while maintaining inner and outer peace regardless of the situation.
Spiritual Intelligence must show up in our actions an our behaviors.
PERPETUAL SELF CONFLICT: SELF AWARENESS AS A KEYMurray Hunter
PERPETUAL SELF CONFLICT: SELF AWARENESS AS A KEY
TO OUR ETHICAL DRIVE, PERSONAL MASTERY, AND
PERCEPTION OF ENTREPRENEURIAL OPPORTUNITIES
Contemporary Readings in Law and Social Justice, Vol. 3, No. 3, 2011, pp. 96-137
1. Name : Chia Sue Yi
Student ID : 0315334
Course : Foundation in Natural and Built Environment
Assignment : Social Psychology - Journal 2
Date of submission : 18/12/13
2. Conformity and Group Behavior
“The scientific field that seeks to understand the nature and causes of individual
behavior in social situations”. (Baron, Byrne & Suls ,1989). In my opinion, 'conformity' is
one of the most interesting topic from social psychology and basically it is a topic that
constantly changing me in order to better suite with other people. This topic is all about the
disposition to behave like others do, especially like those of a specific social group such as
one's peers. Conformity always happen in a group especially assigned roles to people that
determine what behavior and responsibilities people should take on.
In this lecture, I had learnt about the factors that influence conformity which is group
size and group unanimity. For example, Solomon Ash found that group size influenced
whether subject conformed. Which mean that, if the bigger the group, the people conformed,
up to a certain point. After group size reached a certain limit, conformity didn't increase any
further. In the other hand, for group unanimity, Solomon Ash found that subjects were much
more likely to conform when a group agreed unanimously. In my opinion, I think that
conformity play a important roles in a communication structure that determines who talks to
whom within the group.
Along this topic, I had find out the benefit within a group as group are always the
better way to solve complicated logic problem and team of student outperform individual in
academic tasks. However, I also had learnt about behavior in group, the bystander effect. This
effect shown that people are less likely to help when they are in group than when alone.
3. Power and Perils of Intuition
Thinking, automatic thinking, overestimating, constructing memories and
reconstructing our past attitudes. All of this component is reveal to the Power and Perils of
Intuition. From the lesson that I had learnt, intuition feeds automatic behaviours, creativity,
and spirituality. But intuition is also terrifying. Today's cognitive science aims not to destroy
intuition but to fortify it, to sharpen thinking and deepen wisdom. However, In my opinion,
'power' can identify as the most reliable guide as to whether or not our actions are really in
the long-term interests of our planet and all the life it supports. In the other hand, Perils
identify as a big part of human decision making. But the complementary truth is that intuition
often errs.
What create Power and Perils of Intuition? This is the question that inspire to
understand more to this topic. So psychological science has identified four influence on our
intuition about risk which is 'fear'. First, we fear what our ancestral history has prepared us to
fear, which includes confinement and heights. Second, we fear that we cannot control. When
stand on the stair, we fell self reliant and hence confident. Third, we fear what is immediate.
For example, earthquake may be a potent future weapon of mass destruction, but we live in
the present. Fourth, we fear threat most readily available in memory. Since, Memories is
something that not exact copies of experience that remain on deposit in memory bank.
Along this topic, I learnt that the value of Intuition is about modern cognitive science
which is revealing depth of unconscious mind of our thinking, feeling, and acting occurs
outside conscious awareness. 'Intuition is bigger than we realize.' It feed our
expertise ,creativity, love and spirituality. But again, it is wonderful. But it's also perilous.
4. Reference
Ars, Arte et Labore. 2013. The Powers and Perils of Intuition. [online] Available at:
http://supersededotcom.wordpress.com/2012/06/28/the-powers-and-perils-of-intuition/
[Accessed: 17 Dec 2013]
Wolfweb.unr.edu. 2013. Finite Group Behavior FGB3.0. [online] Available at:
http://wolfweb.unr.edu/homepage/keppelma/fgb.html [Accessed: 17 Dec 2013]
Mcleod, S. 2013. What is Conformity? - Simply Psychology. [online] Available at:
http://www.simplypsychology.org/conformity.html [Accessed: 17 Dec 2013]