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  2. Rule consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_consciousness

    The rule consciousness as one of the primary factors of personality out of sixteen as categorized by Raymond Cattell, 1946 as low and high level. [1] The descriptors of low level rule consciousness are expedient, nonconforming, disregards rules, self-indulgent or having a low super ego strength while the high level consciousness are rule-conscious, dutiful, conscientious, conforming ...

  3. Dwight F. Davis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwight_F._Davis

    Dwight Filley Davis Sr. (July 5, 1879 – November 28, 1945) was an American tennis player and politician. He is best remembered as the founder of the Davis Cup international tennis competition. He was the Assistant Secretary of War from 1923 to 1925 and Secretary of War from 1925 to 1929.

  4. Human behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_behavior

    Human behavior is studied by the social sciences, which include psychology, sociology, ethology, and their various branches and schools of thought. [1] There are many different facets of human behavior, and no one definition or field study encompasses it in its entirety. [2]

  5. Davis Rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis_Rules

    The series stars Randy Quaid as Dwight Davis, a widowed elementary school principal outside of Seattle, Washington who is raising his three sons (Robbie, Charlie, and Ben) with the help of his wacky father Gunny Davis (Jonathan Winters).

  6. Dwight Davis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwight_Davis

    Dwight F. Davis (1879–1945), American tennis player and politician Delbert Dwight Davis (1908–1965), American zoologist Dwight Davis (basketball) (born 1949), American basketball player

  7. Laws of association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_Association

    Laws of association in Aristotle's psychology. Impressions are stored in the seat of perception, linked by the laws of similarity, contrast, and contiguity.. In psychology, the principal laws of association are contiguity, repetition, attention, pleasure-pain, and similarity.

  8. Speech codes theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_codes_theory

    A speech code can also be defined as "a historically enacted socially constructed system of terms, meanings, premises, and rules, pertaining to communicative conduct." [ 1 ] "This theory seeks to answer questions about the existence of speech codes, their substance, the way they can be discovered, and their force upon people within a culture ...

  9. Moral foundations theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_foundations_theory

    In contrast to the dominant theories of morality in psychology at the time, the anthropologist Richard Shweder developed a set of theories emphasizing the cultural variability of moral judgments, but argued that different cultural forms of morality drew on "three distinct but coherent clusters of moral concerns", which he labeled as the ethics ...