Television emotional society of the 19th century Ralph Waldo Emerson's transcendental philosophy is extreme but not sensational. Most of his papers and poems are declarations on how humans communicate with the natural world. Emerson 's idea of embracing nature by organizing arms was diluted on the day to appreciate nature by remotely controlling animal programs on TV. Now in the 21st century, humans have become accustomed to quantifying personal value through separation experience.
Today's society associates an image of a stereotype with an emotional meal with its troublesome gender criteria. It ties an emotional meal to a depressed woman sitting in front of the TV, and her elbows soaked in the ice cream pint deeply. What I did not think was a man crying alone in the dark with 4 to 5 big pizzas around him. As a person who eats emotionally, you do not have to be sad or need a woman. In fact, emotional diets are not differentiated, and everyone can suffer, regardless of age, ethnicity, socio-economic background and sex.
¿ 1/2 Collective emotional orientation is the characteristic tendency of society expressing specific emotions. It evokes emotions and beliefs for specific emotions, is widely shared by members of society and often appears in social public discourse, cultural products and educational materials (Bar-Tal, 2001). It is important to note that inconsistencies between macro scale groups are not necessarily symmetric in all dimensions. Of particular importance in understanding asymmetric conflicts is the level of military economic power. This asymmetry has a big impact on how to manage conflicts. When analyzing conflicts, we need to consider these asymmetries.
Efforts are frequently made to adjust the mood based on social conventions and based on many (and sometimes contradictory) demands and expectations from various organizations. Girls and women express anger in many cultures (men do not encourage expression of anger, as men show anger and treat them as dangerous or avoiding him, men look as a threat It is done, it is a woman), boys and men will not encourage fear. The expectation for a social role such as "playing a man" rather than a woman, and the accompanying "rules of emotion" contribute to the difference in specific emotional expression. In many cultures, free expression of aversion is considered socially unacceptable. Some of the social systems, such as love in the modern marriage system, are thought to be based on specific emotions.