Anthropology Discussion post

 

Save Time On Research and Writing
Hire a Pro to Write You a 100% Plagiarism-Free Paper.
Get My Paper

There are several biological and cultural characteristics that identify the genus Homo.

What makes Homo biologically different from the rest of the fossils we have seen? Use

this interactive tool

to uncover the differences (the tool requires Flash and runs better in Firefox).  

Save Time On Research and Writing
Hire a Pro to Write You a 100% Plagiarism-Free Paper.
Get My Paper

What evidence of culture do we see in the genus Homo? Tools? Hunting techniques Shelters? Burials? Art? What does this mean for understanding what it means to be human? 

11/7/18

1

Chapter Eleven

Being with Others: Forming
Relationships in Young and

Middle Adulthood

11.1 Relationships

Love Relationships

• Sternberg’s three basic components of love
– Passion
– Intimacy
– Commitment

• Couples are happier when each feels the
same types of love to a similar degree

• The longer a relationship lasts, the lower its
intimacy and passion, but the greater its
commitment

11/7/18

2

Love Through Adulthood

• Infatuation: characterizes early stages of
romance when passion is high, but intimacy
and commitment are lower
– Higher divorce rates in couples who marry

based primarily on infatuation
• Assortative mating: selecting one’s partner

based on similarity across many dimensions
– Homogamy: degree to which people are

similar; greater when couples meet through
school or a religious setting

Love Through Adulthood:
What Heterosexual Women Want

• Women choose masculine-looking men for
shorter-term relationships and feminine-
looking men for long-term relationships

• Certain traits are universally desirable
– Physical attractiveness, especially for men
– Being a good provider, especially for

women
– In both genders: love, mutual attraction,

dependability, emotional stability, kindness,
and understanding

E
x
p
lo

ri
n
g
L

if
e
sp

a
n
D

e
v
e
lo

p
m

e
n
t

T
h
ir

d
E

d
it

io
n

L
a
u
ra

E
.

B
e
rk

Childhood Attachment Patterns and
Adult Romantic Relationships

11/7/18

3

Developmental Forces and Love
Relationships

• Love is a function of biopsychosocial forces
• Love is a distinct neurological emotion system,

with different stages of love involving different
neurochemicals

• Erikson: mature love is impossible without a
capacity for intimacy

11.3 The Family Lifecycle

Family Life Cycle

• Early adulthood
– Leaving home

Marriage

– Parenthood

• Middle adulthood
– Launching children

• Late adulthood
– Retirement
– Death of spouse

11/7/18

4

Leaving Home

• Average age of leaving increased over last 50
years

• More than 50% leave, then return briefly
• Parents highly committed to helping children

move into adult roles

Marriage

• Studies show the median age at which
couples marry has been rising for the past
several decades

• Women who marry under the age of 20 are:
– Three times more likely to divorce than

women who marry in their 20s
– Six times more likely to divorce than those

who marry in their 30s

What is a Successful Marriage, and
What Predicts It?

• Marriages are likelier to succeed when:
– Both partners are relatively mature

• this may be why marriages in one’s early
20s or younger tend to fail

– The couple has similar values and interests
– Each partner contributes equitably

(exchange theory)
– Couples are honest and committed, they

trust and consult each other, and they
make decisions jointly

11/7/18

5

Do Married Couples Stay Happy?

• Vulnerability-stress adaptation model: marital
satisfaction is a function of the couple’s ability
to deal with stress, given its vulnerabilities
and resources at each particular point in time

• Marital and cohabital satisfaction is highest in
the beginning, falls until children begin
leaving home, and rises again in later life

• When dependence is more equal, marriage
tends to stay strong and close

Keeping Marriages Happy

• Enduring marital satisfaction is likelier when
couples:
– Are forgiving, understanding, flexible,

adaptive, and available for, and interested
in, the other

– Keep the romance alive and express love
– Confide in each other; communicate

constructively and positively
– Share spirituality and/or religious beliefs

Deciding Whether to Have Children

• 50%+ of U.S. pregnancies are unplanned
• Considerations:

– Finances
– Personal values
– Religious values

• Childless couples have a higher standard of
living and greater marital satisfaction

• Societal attitudes toward childless couples
have improved since the 1970s

11/7/18

6

The Parental Role

• Couples are having fewer children and
waiting longer to have them

• Older parents are more at ease, affectionate,
sensitive, and supportive

• More than 70% of women with children under
18 are employed outside the home and still
perform most of the childrearing tasks

• Men who become fathers in their 30s spend
more time caring for their preschool children

11/5/1

8

1

Chapter Ten

Becoming an Adult: Physical,
Cognitive, and Personality

Development In Young Adulthood

10.1

Emerging Adulthood

When Do People Become Adults?

• Quarterlife crisis: similar to a midlife crisis, but
occurs in one’s 20s
– A relatively new term for a period of self-

exploration, search for meaning, and
adjustment to daily hassles or life
challenges

11/5/18

2

Emerging Adulthood

• No definitive criteria for marking when one
becomes an adult, especially in the West

• Emerging adulthood: a relatively new term
referring to the period when people are not
adolescents but are not fully adults
– Encompasses the years between late

adolescence and early 30s
– Social and demographic trends since the

1970s have created this new
developmental period

Role Transitions Marking Adulthood

• Role transitions: new responsibilities and
duties that mark movement into the next
developmental stages

• Rites of passage: important rituals marking
initiation into adulthood

Erikson

• Intimacy vs. isolation: major psychosocial
conflict during young adulthood (Erikson’s 6th
stage)

• Intimacy involves creating a shared identity
with another

• Stronger sense of one’s own identity is
needed to achieve this intimacy

11/5/18

3

10.2 Physical Development & Health

Growth, Strength, and Physical
Functioning

• Height is at its tallest during young adulthood
• Physical strength, coordination, and dexterity

in both sexes peaks in the late 20s and early
30s

• Most senses remain acute through to middle
age or old age
– Hearing begins to decline in the late 20s,

especially for high-pitched tones

10.3 Cognitive Development

11/5/18

4

How Should We View Intelligence in
Adults?

• Most theories are multidimensional, though
there is disagreement as to the dimensions

• Baltes et al.’s three dimensions
– Multidirectionality: some aspects improve

while others decline during adulthood
– Interindividual vari

ability

: patterns of

change vary between people
– Plasticity: abilities can be modified under

the right conditions

Primary – and Secondary Mental
Abilities

• Primary mental abilities: groups of related skills
organized into hypothetical constructs
– Number
– Verbal meaning
– Inductive reasoning
– Spatial orientation
– Word fluency

• Secondary mental abilities: clusters of related
primary abilities used as a framework for
describing intelligence’s structure; difficult to
measure directly

Fluid and Crystalized Intelligence

• Fluid and crystallized intelligence are
secondary mental abilities

• Fluid intelligence: being a flexible, adaptive
thinker, who can make inferences, and
understand concepts’ relationships
– Declines throughout adulthood

• Crystallized intelligence: knowledge of facts,
definitions, language, etc., acquired by life
experience
– Improves throughout adulthood

11/5/18

5

Fluid and Crystalized Intelligence

Integrating Emotion and Logic in Life
Problems

• In postformal thinking, decision-making and
problem-solving emphasize:
– Change and context-dependent principles

instead of conformity and context-free
principle

– Pragmatics of the situation, emotion, and
social facets more than logic alone

– The relative rather than absolute nature of
rules and norms

Going Beyond Formal Operations:
Thinking in Adulthood

• Postformal thought
• Reflective judgment

– Prereflective reasoning
– Quasi-reflective reasoning
– Reflective reasoning

11/5/18

6

10.4 Personality in Young Adulthood

Creating Scenarios and Life Stories

• Life-span construct: one’s unified sense of
the past, present, and future

• Scenario: expectations of how one’s future
life will play out
– Helps people formulate a game plan and a

way to track progress
• Social clock: a personal timetable tagging the

time or age by which future goals or events
are to be completed

McAdams’s Life-Story Model

• Life story: a personal narrative organizing
past events into a coherent sequence
reflecting one’s identity, ideology, and goals
– Agency and communion are themes
– Attitudes toward one’s story are conveyed

through emotions (e.g., optimism)
– Begins forming in late adolescence
– From middle age onward, reshaped to form

generativity

11/5/18

7

Possible Selves

• Possible selves: representations of one’s
hoped-for-selves and feared-for-selves

• With increasing age, important possible
selves concern personal matters more than
family ones

• Young and middle-aged adults are more
optimistic about achieving hoped-for-selves

• Much older adults perceive the self as
remaining stable
– Physical health is an important feared self

Personal Control Beliefs

• Personal control beliefs: extent to which
performance depends on one’s own effort or
ability rather than outside forces
– Greatly affects personality, social, health,

intellectual, and career outcomes
• Results of research on development of personal

control beliefs are inconsistent
• Control beliefs vary depending upon the domain

in which they are studied (e.g., intelligence
versus health)

Personal Control Beliefs: Domains

• Examples of domain-specific findings:
– People’s perceived control of marital

happiness increasing with age
– One’s development declining with age

• One domain-nonspecific finding is that
satisfaction is greater for:
– Younger adults who attribute success to

their effort
– Older adults who attribute success to their

ability

11/5/18
8

Personal Control Beliefs: Primary
and Secondary Control

• Primary control: modifying the external
environment to fit one’s needs and goals (e.g.,
asking a teacher for tutoring)

• Secondary control: modifying one’s cognitions,
goals, or behavioral standards (e.g., attributing
failure on a test to task difficulty instead of ability)

• Primary and secondary control operate in parallel
during first half of life; primary declines in midlife

Calculate your order
Pages (275 words)
Standard price: $0.00
Client Reviews
4.9
Sitejabber
4.6
Trustpilot
4.8
Our Guarantees
100% Confidentiality
Information about customers is confidential and never disclosed to third parties.
Original Writing
We complete all papers from scratch. You can get a plagiarism report.
Timely Delivery
No missed deadlines – 97% of assignments are completed in time.
Money Back
If you're confident that a writer didn't follow your order details, ask for a refund.

Calculate the price of your order

You will get a personal manager and a discount.
We'll send you the first draft for approval by at
Total price:
$0.00
Power up Your Academic Success with the
Team of Professionals. We’ve Got Your Back.
Power up Your Study Success with Experts We’ve Got Your Back.

Order your essay today and save 30% with the discount code ESSAYHELP