PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR, AGGRESSION, MORALITY

Flashcard 1

  • Front: What are the three domains of social knowledge according to Social Domain Theory?

  • Back: Moral, Societal, and Psychological

Flashcard 2

  • Front: What is the Moral Domain concerned with?

  • Back: Justice, Rights, Welfare of Others, Fairness 2

Flashcard 3

  • Front: What is the Societal Domain concerned with?

  • Back: Conventions, Customs, and Traditions 3

Flashcard 4

  • Front: What is the Psychological Domain concerned with?

  • Back: Personal Choice, Autonomy 4

Flashcard 5

  • Front: According to the presented information, what is morality more than?

  • Back: Just "helping" and simply following the rules 5

Flashcard 6

  • Front: What does morality involve?

  • Back: How individuals ought to treat others: justice, others’ welfare (avoiding harm) and rights. It also involves ensuring fair and equal treatment

Flashcard 7

  • Front: List the criteria for differentiation of rules.

  • Back: Authority Jurisdiction, Punishment Avoidance, Rule contingency, Generalizability, Rule alterability 7

Flashcard 8

  • Front: What does Eisenberg's theory focus on?

  • Back: Positive justice - Why people do the right thing 8

Flashcard 9

  • Front: List Eisenberg's levels of prosocial reasoning.

  • Back:

    1. Hedonistic or self-focused orientation

    2. Needs orientation

    3. Approval/Interpersonal orientation

    4. Self-reflective empathic orientation

    5. Internalized orientation 9

Flashcard 10

  • Front: Define empathy.

  • Back: The ability to experience the emotions or feelings of another person 10

Flashcard 11

  • Front: Define aggression.

  • Back: An action done with the intent to harm others 11

Flashcard 12

  • Front: List some contributing factors to aggression.

  • Back: Biology, Frustration, Learning

Flashcard 13

  • Front: List cognitive distortions associated with aggression.

  • Back: Externalizing blame, mislabeling or minimizing blame, and hostile attribution bias

Flashcard 14

  • Front: Define Hostile attribution bias

  • Back: Tendency to interpret another’s intention as hostile

Flashcard 15

  • Front: Define Externalizing blame

  • Back: Seeing oneself as the victim

Flashcard 16

  • Front: Define Mislabeling or minimizing blame

  • Back: Viewing behavior as less serious than others see it