100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary SLK 220 Test 1 notes R180,00
Add to cart

Summary

Summary SLK 220 Test 1 notes

 40 views  3 purchases

I received a distinction for SLK 220 and i am part of golden key. Here is a summary for chapter 2, 3 and 4

Preview 4 out of 50  pages

  • August 29, 2022
  • 50
  • 2021/2022
  • Summary
All documents for this subject (25)
avatar-seller
NerdLG101
Chapter 2

Nature, nurture and social behaviour:

Explaining the psyche:
➢ One approach to understand how people think, feel and act is to try to understand
what the human psyche or human mind is designed for
Psyche= A broader term for the mind, encompassing emotions, desires, perceptions and
all other psychological processes.


✓ To understand something, you need to understand what it was designed to do
✓ We turn to nature and culture because those are what made the psyche the way it is
✓ If the psyche was designed to do something in particular, then nature and culture
designed it for a purpose

Nature:
• The nature explanations say that people are born a certain way: Their genes,
hormones, brain structure and other processes dictate how they will choose and act.

Culture:
• The cultural explanations focus on what people learn from their parents, from
society and from their own experiences.



Nature and culture have shaped each other.

▪ Nature has prepared human beings specifically for culture.
▪ Characteristics that set humans apart from other animals
include:
➢ Language
➢ A flexible self that can hold multiple roles
➢ An advanced ability to understand each other’s
mental states
▪ These characteristics are mainly there to enable people to
create and sustain culture.
▪ This interaction between nature and culture is the key to
understanding how people think.




Nature defined:
Nature: The physical world around us, including its laws and processes. (includes
the entire world that would be there even if no human beings existed)

,Nature includes:
✓ Trees and grass
✓ Insects and animals (elephants)
✓ Gravity, The weather
✓ Hunger and thirst
✓ Birth and death, People
✓ Atoms and molecules
✓ Laws of physics and chemistry

Evolution, and doing what’s natural:
➢ Over the past two decades, many social psychologists have begun to
help explain social behaviour

Theory of evolution: A theory proposed by Charles Darwin to explain
how change occurs in nature.

➢ Over thousands of years, a plant or animal may evolve into a
somewhat different kind of creature.
➢ Human beings and the great apes evolved as part of the same family
tree.
➢ Human beings may be different from all other animals, but we are
animals, nonetheless.
➢ We have the same wants, needs and problems that most other animals
have.
▪ We need food and water on a regular basis.
▪ We need sleep.
▪ We need shelter and warmth.
▪ We need air.
▪ We suffer illnesses and injuries and must find ways to
recover from them.

➢ Our interactions with others are sometimes characterised by
sexual desire, competition, aggressive impulses, family ties or
friendly companionship.
➢ An important feature of most loving things, including animals
and thus humans, is the drive to prolong life.
➢ Two ways to do this:
1. Go on living
• Death has always been a disturbing threat.
2. Reproduction
• Life makes new life.

Change is another common trait of living things:

, ➢ Each living thing changes as it grows older.
➢ Generation changes: baby has both parents’ genes and
creates a totally new person.
• Powerful forces react to these random changes: As a result, some
random changes will disappear, whereas others will endure

NATURAL SELECTION =The process whereby those members
of a species that survive and reproduce most effectively are the
ones that pass along their genes to future generations. (Decides
which traits will disappear and which will continue)

Two criteria:
1. Survival
2. Reproduction
• A trait that improves survival or reproduction will tend to last for many
generations and become more common.
• A trait that reduces one’s chances for survival or reproduction will
probably not become common.
- Biological success of any trait is measured in these terms.

SURVIVAL = Living longer.
✓ Depends in part on the circumstances in your environment.
• Herbert Spencer = ‘survival of the fittest’ – A phrase to describe natural
selection.

➢ Biologists have shifted their emphasis from survival to
reproduction as the single most important factor in natural selection.
REPRODUCTION =Producing babies that survive long enough to also
reproduce.

✓ Reproductive success consists of creating many offspring
who will in turn create many offspring.

MUTATION= A new gene or combination of genes.

How does biological evolution produce changes?
➢ The causal processes depend entirely on random changes to physical
elements, such as genes. The person is programmed to respond in a
certain way.
➢ Molecules, chemicals, electrical impulses in the body and other
physical mechanisms produce the results.

, ➢ Behaviour changes because the physical makeup of the new born
individual is different.
Social Animals:
➢ Being social provides benefits.
➢ Being social is a strategy that enables some species to survive and
reproduce effectively.
➢ That is the biological starting point of social psychology: being social
improves survival and reproduction.
➢ The disadvantage of being social is that it is more difficult to achieve
than solitary life.
➢ Social animals must have something inside them that makes them
recognise each other and want to be together.
▪ They must have something that prompts them to work together, such as
automatic impulses to copy what the others are doing.
▪ They must have ways to resolve the conflicts that always arise in social
life.
▪ They need something similar to self-control to enable them to adjust to group life.
▪ They need complex powerful brains.
The social brain:
➢ What is inside enables the creature to satisfy its needs, and ultimately,
to survive and reproduce.
➢ Social animals accomplish those things by means of social interaction.
Much of what goes on inside the human mind is designed to help the
person relate to others.
➢ Social psychologists spend much time studying people’s inner
processes, including their thoughts and feelings and how their brains
work. =Inner processes serve interpersonal functions.
➢ Social animals require brains with additional, flexible capabilities.

Robin Dunbar compared brain sizes of many different species to see what
behavioural differences went with bigger brains.
✓ Bigger brains were mainly linked to having larger and more complex
social groups.
✓ Small-brained animals tend to live alone or in small, simple groups,
whereas bigger-brained, presumably smarter animals have more
relationships with each other and more complicated groups.
✓ People with bigger social networks have been found to be bigger in
some key brain parts, notably the orbital prefrontal cortex.
✓ The human brain evolved mainly to enable human beings to have rich,
complex social lives.
✓ For understanding each other.
✓ Social brain

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through EFT, credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying this summary from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller NerdLG101. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy this summary for R180,00. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

53068 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy summaries for 14 years now

Start selling
R180,00  3x  sold
  • (0)
Add to cart
Added