202x Filetype PPTX File size 0.96 MB Source: www.cag.edu.tr
Outline • What is aggression? • Some Theories of Aggression – Biological Perspective – Frustration Perspective – Learned Social Behavior Perspective • What are some influences on aggression? – Aversive Incidents – Arousal – Media Influence • How can aggresion be reduced? – Catharsis – Social Learning Approach – Culture Change and World Violence 2 What is aggression? • Physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt someone. • Excludes unintentional harm (car accidents), events includes pain as an unavoidable pain (dental treatments) or assisted suicide (euthanasia). • Includes kicks, slap, threats, insults, even gossip, destroying property, lying and any other behaviors whose goal is to hurt. 3 What is aggression? • Animals display two types of aggression: – Social aggression: displays of rage. – Silent aggression: stalking the prey. • Human also show two types of aggression: – Hostile aggression: springs from anger and aim to injure. – Instrumental aggression: an aggressive behavior intended to achieve a goal. Aggression is used as a tool. 4 What is aggression? • Most of the terrorist attacks are instrumental aggression. Terrorists seek personal significance (being a hero or martyr-şehit). • Wars are also instrumental aggression. • Bullying – adolescents who bully others often seek to demonstrate their dominance. • But, murders are hostile aggression. 5 Some Theories of Aggression • Biological Perspective • Are humans benign or brute? – Rousseau: blames society for social evils. – Hobbes: credits society for restraining the brute. – Freud: aggressive drive is inborn and inevitable. • Instinct Theory and Evolutionary Psychology – Aggressive energy is instinctive. – It redirects toward others the energy of a primitive death urge (Freud). 6
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