Answer:
C. Displacement
Explanation:
While Professor Gomez was going through a painful divorce he tended to create unnecessarily difficult tests and gave his students unusually low grades a psychoanalyst would be most likely to view the professor's treatment of students as an example of displacement. Mr Gomez due to his painful divorce transfered his negative feelings to the students by conducting unnecessarily difficult tests for the student and still gave them low grades which is so unusual of him. This shows that Mr Gomez transferred his anger from the original source of the emotion to a less threatening person. This is known as displacement.
Answer:
The subsequent state is knwon as excitation transfer.
Explanation:
<em>This theory supports that residual excitation from one stimulus will amplify the excitatory response to another stimulus. It is not limited to a single emotion, the excitation transfer process requires the presence of three conditions: the second stimulus occurs before the complete decay of residual excitation from the first one, there is the misattribution of excitation, and the individual has not reached an excitatory threshold before exposure to the second stimulus.</em>
The Mesopotamian city-state of Ur had three main social classes: At the top of this ladder is the nobility; this class included the royal family, priests, and the richest people in society. The middle class, also referred to as commoners, included merchants, farmers, fisherman, artisans, teachers, etc.
Answer: Social Identity Theory
Explanation:
Social identity theory states that our perspective of who we are is affected or influenced by the group to which we belong i.e if we regard our group as the greatest and more influential group then we will also feel that we are the greatest and influential individuals. We may start using words like 'we' 'us' refering to our group including ourselves and this tends to give us a sense of pride and boost our self esteem. Anyone who is not part of our group we refer to as 'them' which brings the terms of in-group and outgroup which the in-group are those who belong to our groups and outgroup are those who doesn't.
This makes us tend to exaggerate our differences to the outgroup and we may start to think we are too great ,too powerful than those who isn't part of 'us'.
Auaruna is doing the same thing exaggerating the power of his in-group die to social identity it gives him personally.