Results 271 to 280 of about 195,151 (312)
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Science, 1971
People will learn an instrumental conditioned response, the reward for which is the deliverance of another human being from suffering.
R F, Weiss +3 more
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People will learn an instrumental conditioned response, the reward for which is the deliverance of another human being from suffering.
R F, Weiss +3 more
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Psychiatric Quarterly, 1981
Pseudo-altruism is a pattern of behavior used by people who have a problem in coping satisfactorily with repressed rage. Observed in both individual and group psychotherapy, it allows the discharge of unacceptable impulses through professed concern about others. This model involves the interaction of at least three people.
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Pseudo-altruism is a pattern of behavior used by people who have a problem in coping satisfactorily with repressed rage. Observed in both individual and group psychotherapy, it allows the discharge of unacceptable impulses through professed concern about others. This model involves the interaction of at least three people.
openaire +2 more sources
Darwinian selection and “altruism”
Theoretical Population Biology, 1978Models are proposed for evolution at a single locus affecting altruistic behavior in which genotypic fitnesses are Darwinian and frequency (but not density) dependent. The fitnesses are composed, either in a multiplicative or an additive way, of factors which depend on the receipt and donation of altruistic behavior. The factors are determined from the
Cavalli-Sforza, L. L., Feldman, M. W.
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Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1975
Abstract This chapter reviews theory and research supporting the contention that mental mechanisms that induce individuals to empathize with others have evolved in several species, and advanced levels of empathy motivate us to help others as an end in itself.
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Abstract This chapter reviews theory and research supporting the contention that mental mechanisms that induce individuals to empathize with others have evolved in several species, and advanced levels of empathy motivate us to help others as an end in itself.
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Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 2002
Though people value altruism, they also value freely choosing if and when to be altruistic. They essay explores the question of whether a society that is more altruistic would be one which is more free or less. It begins by considering cases where altruism is legally enforced, the paradigm example of which is good Samaritan legislation.
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Though people value altruism, they also value freely choosing if and when to be altruistic. They essay explores the question of whether a society that is more altruistic would be one which is more free or less. It begins by considering cases where altruism is legally enforced, the paradigm example of which is good Samaritan legislation.
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Forced Altruism is not Altruism
The American Journal of Bioethics, 2004Sheldon, Zink, Stacey L, Wertlieb
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Putting the Altruism Back into Altruism: The Evolution of Empathy
Annual Review of Psychology, 2008Evolutionary theory postulates that altruistic behavior evolved for the return-benefits it bears the performer. For return-benefits to play a motivational role, however, they need to be experienced by the organism. Motivational analyses should restrict themselves, therefore, to the altruistic impulse and its knowable consequences.
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Psychospiritual Basis of Altruism: A Review
Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 2023Preetha Menon
exaly

