National Socialism: Individual Loss From 1933 to 1945, German national socialism did not provide space for personality. German unification and purification of the Arianian race can not make Nazi German citizens unique. The rise of national socialism was due to a lot of related motivation, from shame felt by the Germans after the defeat in the First World War to racial discrimination against the Jews who struggled Europe. After the First World War, Germany was destroyed both economically and agriculturally.
This paper presents numerous topics. One of the highlights of the story is the degree of personalization. This is usually defined as a loss of individualism in an individual's social group. Therefore, this leads to the loss of moral position, ideology, political opinion and social concept of human beings. Individual discrimination, also known as "group psychology", can be defined as a tendency for an individual to act and act in concert with a group or group. The authors clearly show that consensus can be considered morally expressible. It is seen as its own victim in society. In "Lottery", one of the members of the community received a cruel stone treatment due to collective mentality, but none of these stones showed signs of murder or regret or guilt.
Blindly defining established behavior standards and accepting social roles often leads to loss of identity and loss of individualism. Idealization of colleague pressure and specific members of the community has serious consequences, leading to failure to express standardization and personality. One of the negative effects is that it can not cope with standardization of thinking and stress. People are still looking at themselves as individuals, but they usually find that they follow the normative directions of the group they belong to. There is a positive correlation between drinking, drug use, smoking, and the influence of pressure from colleagues. The peer group has the greatest influence on youth's personal behavior, except that the adolescents use parents or other positive examples as reference groups.