"Disobedience as a psychological and moral problem" Essays and Research Papers

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    There are many psychological disorders that we have studied through the years. The categories for most of them are anxiety‚ personality‚ and dissociative disorders. The one that has helped identify the majority of criminals is antisocial personality disorder. This disorder is one that develops early in people‚ as early as the age of three‚ and as stated before can lead the person to become a criminal. However‚ if the person who has this disorder is raised well he could end up being a hero of

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    A. Explain in three sentences only the educational implications of the following: 1. Thorndike’s laws of learning a. Law of Readiness First primary law of learning‚ according to Thorndike‚ is the ‘Law of Readiness’ or the ‘Law of Action Tendency’‚ which means that learning takes place when an action tendency is aroused through preparatory adjustment‚ set or attitude. Readiness means a preparation of action. If one is not prepared to learn‚ learning cannot be automatically instilled in him‚ for

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    “Symbolism” The Great Gatsby In the 1920’s it was said that the American Dream was initially about the realization of happiness. Everyone began to believe that money could simply buy happiness. Although‚ the phrase “American Dream” was not specifically used in the book it is quite obvious that Fitzgerald shows the significance and definition of the American Dream. He also uses symbols and themes during the whole book to demonstrate the American Dream. Some of the symbols he uses are the eyes of

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    Thoreau’s Ideas About “Civil Disobedience” Outdated Today? “Civil disobedience” is an intentional and non-violent disobedience of law by an individual who believes that a certain law is unjust and who is willing to accept the penalty for breaking that law to bring about change and public awareness. When Henry David Thoreau wrote “On The Duty of Civil Disobedience” in 1849‚ he advocated that democracy in America could only be improved by individual activism and civil disobedience to unjust laws. Thoreau’s

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    constitutional and moral obligations to do so. We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal- yet in modern day American society‚ discrimination and injustice appears to prevail. To secure citizen’s unalienable rights‚ governments are instituted among men‚ deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. Whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends‚ it is the right of the people to alter it‚ doing so through means of civil disobedience.

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    or even now‚ has restrictions we call laws that make zero sense. Not adequate or not favorable to our society. But who came up with these “rules?” Disobeying these “laws” have made our country something great. If it wasn’t because our historical disobedience we would still be living under the “white/colored” division we once had. We came really far from what we once were. Progress. Racism‚ one of our greatest historical mistakes. Some of you might call it something not bad. We would still be living

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    Thoreau’s "Civil Disobedience" Major Themes Civil Government and Higher Law. In Civil Disobedience‚ Thoreau’s basic premise is that a higher law than civil law demands the obedience of the individual. Human law and government are subordinate. In cases where the two are at odds with one another‚ the individual must follow his conscience and‚ if necessary‚ disregard human law. Thoreau prepared his lecture and essay on resistance to civil government in response to a specific event—the Mexican War

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    Olaf Thorson Johnson IB English‚ Period 4 January 1‚ 2013 Civil Disobedience and Antigone Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech focuses on the importance of freedom and brotherhood in a nation and is intended to rally Americans to demonstrate their anger at the injustices of segregation and racism through “creative protest.” While King’s passion and anger at the status quo is obvious in the text‚ he specifically states that they “must not allow [their] [protest] to degenerate into

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    The civility on which the practical and moral consequences of calculated disobedience rely depends on the motivations and actions of its initiators. They must not be motivated by greed or hatred‚ because those emotions remove from disobedience both civility and morality. It is a pure‚ selfless goal that ideologically separates the civil disobeyer from the criminal one. Practically‚ however‚ it is how one carries out his disobedience that sets him apart in the eyes of the public and societal

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    Movies often contain characters with psychological problems or that have an altered state of mind. To learn how learn more about how psychological problems can affect people’s lifestyle we can compare movie films with our knowledge that we have acquired in psychology class. The movie “The Perks of being a Wallflower” shows characters with different psychological problems and altered states of mind. The movie also does a good job of showing how drugs can make you act. The movie “The Perks of Being

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