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Social Sci LibreTexts

4: The Self

  • Page ID
    257572
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    • 4.1: Learning Objectives- The Self
    • 4.2: The Cognitive Self- The Self-Concept
      The self-concept is our knowledge representation about ourselves, including our beliefs about our personality traits, physical characteristics, abilities, values, and roles, which develops from basic self-recognition in infancy to a complex, multi-faceted cognitive structure in adulthood. Self-complexity—having many different and relatively independent ways of thinking about ourselves—serves as a psychological buffer that helps people cope better with negative events...
    • 4.3: The Feeling Self- Self-Esteem
      Self-esteem refers to the positive or negative feelings we have about ourselves, which is influenced by our performance, appearance, and relationships with others. People naturally work to maintain and enhance their self-esteem through various strategies including selective memory processing, self-presentation to others, and seeking out positive feedback that confirms their self-worth. While high self-esteem correlates with many positive outcomes like better academic performance...
    • 4.4: The Social Self- The Role of the Social Situation
      The social self is primarily developed through our interactions with others and the social situations we encounter, as our self-concept and self-esteem are shaped by how we compare ourselves to those around us rather than being formed in isolation. Social comparison occurs when we learn about our abilities and skills, about the appropriateness and validity of our opinions, and about our relative social status by comparing our own attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors with those of others.
    • 4.5: Thinking Like a Social Psychologist About the Self
      Social psychologists examine the self using the same framework they apply to all social phenomena—analyzing it through affect, behavior, and cognition while considering how person-situation interactions shape our self-concept. The chapter emphasizes how our sense of self is remarkably constructed by the social situations we encounter, prompting readers to reflect on their own self-knowledge including their accessible characteristics, social identities, self-concept complexity, group memberships.
    • 4.6: Chapter Summary
      The self-concept consists of complex self-schemas that store our thoughts, beliefs, and feelings about ourselves, with some people having more complex self-concepts than others, and this complexity helps us better respond to life events through varying levels of self-awareness and self-consciousness. Self-esteem reflects our positive or negative self-evaluations, which are influenced by our perceived social status and our tendency toward self-presentation, though the drive for self-enhancement.


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