Discussion on Brain Development in India

1971 Words4 Pages

Introduction:
The present generation, by far the most critical morale demonstration rather too light, bright, and shy; they want popularity and vivacity if consistent usage of social networks. Feelings, impulses, wishes, and fantasies are the dominant dynamic content of adult world. My discussion of brain development in India is clustered around basic individual’s reciprocity with social environment, where immediate members of family are the critical counter players. It is complicated and ambivalent relationship to pleasure, which we spend most of time and resources pursuing. A key motivator of our lives, pleasure is central to learning, for we must find things like food, water, and sex rewarding in order to survive and pass our genetic material to the next generation. Aristotle discusses the various moral virtues and their corresponding vices. Courage consists of confidence in the face of fear. Temperance consists of not giving in too easily to the pleasures of physical sensation. Liberality and magnificence consist of giving away varying amounts of money in appropriate and tasteful ways. Magnanimity and proper ambition consist of having the right disposition toward honor and knowing what is one’s due. Patience is the appropriate disposition toward anger, though it is sometimes appropriate to show some degree of anger. The three social virtues of amiability, sincerity, and wit make for pleasant and engaging interaction with others. Modesty is not properly a virtue, but an appropriate disposition toward shame, which is admirable in the young.
He further said that goal of a sound civil order in his Politics, social and political scientists and social psychologists have been particularly interested in what makes human beings happy...

... middle of paper ...

...etween them on the basis of our best wisdom and integrity making the best choice we can between these usually conflicting issues. Human important ability is to choose and express rationally.

Works Cited

Inner World: A Psycho-Analytic Study of Childhood and Society in India: Psychoanalytic Study of Childhood and Society in India, OUP India, 2Rev Ed (14 October 1982) ISBN 0-19-561305-8 (10), ISBN 978-0-19-561305-6 (13)
Allport, G. W. (1950). The individual and his religion. New York: McMillan.
Whitehouse, H. (1995). Inside the Cult: Religious innovation and transmission in Papua New Guinea Oxford: Clarendon Press
Kierkegaard, Søren (1968). The Concept of Irony: with Constant Reference to Socrates. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-20111-9.

Web Reference http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socrates http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/religion_Wikipedia

Open Document