YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Basic Ethical Theories
Essays 3571 - 3600
the beginning of her career in the 1950s, Peplau indicated that she believed that the significance between the nurse and the patie...
occurrence of profitable variations" (Darwin IV). This offers the reader an understanding of how change and alteration creates new...
exist, most often between the races. His claim asserts that certain populations (privileged race) have historically been in contr...
economy. They also state that "almost all IMF programs focus are the public sector deficit and the creation of domestic credit by ...
discussed mostly in terms of European integration that occurred during the middle of the twentieth century. Although a theory titl...
escalate into World War III; if he did nothing or offered a weak response, the balance of power would clearly shift in the directi...
the consequences of human action" (Kemerling, 2001). What Kant is saying is that even if we make a choice to take some sort of act...
on a child and include the family and neighbors, school, peers, religious or church groups, youth and/or the sports groups in whic...
do-they really react to their environment. A family system for example will involve a mother, father, sister and brother. If the f...
about the factory workers and how they did not feel as if they accomplish anything. This idea of course was born on the backs of t...
upon individuals within a group" (Wong, 2005). This theory lays the blame for delinquent behavior on the community, which was una...
under role model and peer pressure. A critical stage for developing self-identity (University of Hawaii, 1990). 6. Stage 6: Young ...
concerned with other members of the family. Values, attitudes and beliefs change. One may go from not caring about politics to bec...
in Eriksons stages. Each has two names: Trust vs. Mistrust; Autonomy vs. Shame; Initiative vs. Guilt; Industry vs. Inferiority; Id...
which led to social behavior and perception as "social behaviorism". Social behaviorism was seen as a fluid and changeable proces...
illegal activity even when they are wholly aware of what is right and wrong. This accepted justification of antisocial behavior r...
The advantage of this methodology was that unlike Aristotelian sciences this was more practical and more certain in the way it was...
three phases in stress adaptation, general adaptation syndrome (GAS): 1. Fight or Flight-The alarm reaction: An event occurs that...
is caused by eating an animal. As a utilitarian, Singer focuses more on the consequences of the act and not the consequences of f...
essential ingredient of the accelerated globalization of the late-nineteenth and the early-twentieth centuries" (p.319). Yet, one ...
class will be able to violate the laws with impunity while members of the subject classes will be punished. * Persons are labeled...
as tort law have been seen in term of moralistic tendencies. If we look a the way cases are settled, then the courts also show t...
body, the weakest has strength enough to kill the strongest, either by secret machination, or by confederacy with others, that are...
a source of wonder to try to determine what the motivation source was for Harry Stack Sullivan. Sullivan was a lonely child, a co...
is defined as the needs of that individual to meet "Universal self-care requisites associated with life processes and maintenance ...
discipline of nursing (Wilkerson, 1998). Examination of nursing theory shows that, on a fundamental level, nursing theories provid...
and continues to do so, over the past two decades, as it was first published in 1979 (Falk-Rafael, 2000). In formulating her theor...
religious direction in the lives of modern adolescents are factors that impact whether children turn to delinquency and crime. ...
Olsen, 2006). The authors recognized that within the scope of nursing theory, the paradigms can relate to either the practical nu...
of fulfilling desires of order. Orem also sees the family as a relational concept (Taylor, 2001, p. 7). It only exists because o...