The Psychology of Interpersonal RelationsPublished in the year 1982, The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations is a valuable contribution to the field of Social Psychology. |
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Contents
1 | |
CHAPTER 2 PERCEIVING THE OTHER PERSON | 20 |
CHAPTER 3 THE OTHER PERSON AS PERCEIVER | 59 |
CHAPTER 4 THE NAIVE ANALYSIS OF ACTION | 79 |
CHAPTER 5 DESIRE AND PLEASURE | 125 |
CHAPTER 6 ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS | 164 |
CHAPTER 7 SENTIMENT | 174 |
CHAPTER 8 OUGHT AND VALUE | 218 |
CHAPTER 10 BENEFIT AND HARM | 252 |
CHAPTER 11 REACTION TO THE LOT OF THE OTHER PERSON | 277 |
CHAPTER 12 CONCLUSION | 295 |
A NOTATION FOR REPRESENTING INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS | 299 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 302 |
311 | |
317 | |
CHAPTER 9 REQUEST AND COMMAND | 244 |
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Common terms and phrases
ability action Adam Smith attitude attribution balance become behavior beliefs benefit and harm Brunswik cause Chapter cognitive concepts conflict connection considered coordinated defined definite desire and pleasure difficulty direction discussed dislike dispositional properties distal distal object distal stimulus effect emotional contagion emotions enjoy enjoyment entities environment environmental evaluation example experience fact factors feel field figures find first fit force goal harmony Heider impersonal implies important influence instance intention interaction interpersonal relations interpretation invariant Kurt Lewin means mediation ment motives naive psychology negative notU objective order occur one’s perceived person’s personal causality phenomena positive relation possible produce proximal reaction refer relevant retribution revenge scientific seen sentiment significance similar situation social perception specific Spinoza stimulus pattern sufficient tend tendency theory things tion underlying unit formation unit relation valence visual perception wants wish