Anthropological and Psychological Theories About Social Change

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Across
  1. 2. The spread of ideas, methods, symbols and tools from one culture to another.
  2. 5. A complex mental disorder that leads to feelings of distress and social isolation.
  3. 6. The branch of psychology that focuses on health and wellness issues.
  4. 9. Rewarding of people who display what society considers good behaviour.
  5. 10. Jung’s term for people who use their psychological power to look inward, becoming emotionally self-sufficient.
  6. 11. Is the branch of psychology that sets up experiments to see how individuals act in particular situations; deals with measuring and explaining human behaviour.
  7. 16. Acculturation through free borders of ideas and symbols from one culture to another.
  8. 17. A category of mental disorder in which the patient has feelings of high levels of anxiety or tension in managing our daily lives.
  9. 18. Prolonged contact between two cultures, during which time the interchange symbols, beliefs, and customs.
  10. 19. The term used by psychologists for the part of our mind of which we are not aware.
  11. 20. Jung’s term for people who use their psychological power to draw close to other people, and rely on them for much of their sense of well being.
  12. 21. The psychological theory that learning can be programmed by whatever consequence follows a particular behaviour.
Down
  1. 1. The belief that cultures evolve in common patterns, moving from hunter-gathering cultures to industrialized states in predictable stages.
  2. 2. Acculturation through dominance of one culture over another, forcing the defeated to change aspects of its culture, or its entire culture.
  3. 3. Theories of psychologists attempting to determine the methods that can successfully change or modify problem human behaviour.
  4. 4. Category of mental disorder, categorized by a habitual pattern of rule-breaking and harming others.
  5. 7. A category of mental disorder in which the patient suffers from irrational thoughts of persecution or foreboding.
  6. 8. A structures philosophy against which all actions and events are judged.
  7. 9. A category of mental disorder in which the patient has lost touch with the real world, and may suffer from delusions or hallucinations.
  8. 12. Contact with other cultures.
  9. 13. Punishment of people who do something of which society disapproves.
  10. 14. Studies in which a group of people is tracked over a long period of time, sometimes even incorporation the group’s children into the study as them come along.
  11. 15. Maslow’s term for the final stage of human needs, in which a person integrates the self, making the personality whole.