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  2. The “I” is our creative, novel response to a situation. Our “Me” is the part of our self that accounts for the larger social world. Our self is an internal dialogue between these two components. In most situations our “Me” prevails because of how we are socialized.

  3. Differentiate psychological and sociological theories of self-development. Explain the process of moral development. When we are born, we have a genetic makeup and biological traits. However, who we are as human beings develops through social interaction.

  4. Oct 22, 2018 · The concept of self is widely employed by sociologists to represent the way in which individual persons come to understand who they are in relation to others, and the way in which individual actions are motivated, planned, and adjusted within a social setting.

  5. Danielle’s case underlines an important point that sociologists make about socialization, namely that the human self does not emerge “naturally” as a process driven by biological mechanisms. What is a self? What does it mean to have a self? The self refers to a persons distinct sense of identity. It is who a person is for themselves ...

  6. May 15, 2018 · From a classical sociological perspective, the self is a relatively stable set of perceptions of who we are in relation to ourselves, others, and to social systems. The self is socially constructed in the sense that it is shaped through interaction with other people.

  7. Dec 3, 2020 · Summary. This chapter provides an outline of identity theory as it has developed out of its structural symbolic interaction origins. Identities are sets of meanings that define who we are in terms of the roles we have, the groups or social categories to which we belong, or the unique characteristics that make us different from others.The ...

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