Answer:
The correct answer is ''ability to take the role''.
Explanation:
George Herbert Mead was a social psychologist who explained that the human societies in which we are interested are forest societies. The human individual is a self, only insofar as he takes the attitude of the other towards himself. Insofar as that attitude is that of a certain number of others, insofar as he can adopt the organized attitudes of a certain number of others who are cooperating in a common activity, he takes the group's attitudes towards himself, by taking that or those attitudes, is defining the object of the group that which defines and controls response. For Mead this is possible insofar as people are capable of internalizing the behavior of others, we are capable of acting knowing the behavior that others will do. By internalizing the "generalized other", that is, the attitudes of others, the individual behaves in a certain way.
Answer:
Superego.
Explanation:
Sigmund Freud explains that the human psyche is not composed of a single component. His psychoanalytical theory has three elements which develop at different stages and work together to determine a human personality. These systems are termed as id, ego, and superego. Only id is inborn in humans which refers to the primitive behavior and ego is the rational approach which mediates between the id and superego.
Superego determine the sense of right and wrong in an individual.according to Freud it starts to develop around the age five and it enforces the ideals of ethics and moral principle acceptable in society. It controls the id's impulses which are not acceptable in a society.
I believe the answer is a Parliamentary Monarchy
Answer: memory construction
Explanation: memory construction best illustrates recall in the example given, It's evening and we're mentally replaying the day's events, we picture our facial expressions as we listened to a friend's tale of woe. because we were unable to see these expressions at the time. Furthermore, memory construction involves deducing our past from stored information in addition to what we now assume.