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Monday, January 14, 2019

Aggression Theory

Physical violence is one of the types of violence that may be clearly explained theory. Physical violence entails choking, grabbing, hitting, hitting with weapons or objects, kicking, obliging a person to do or sothing involuntarily, pulling, punching, pushing, scratching, shoving, slapping, etc. (Do.., n.d.). pugnacity Theory Explaining the Type of Violence ChosenExternally-stimulated Aggression is the school of Aggression Theory which can clearly explain animal(prenominal) violence. Externally-stimulated Aggression begins with the premise that aggression occurs because of innate predispositions as well as external stimuli (Smith, 1999).The external stimuli referred to here is technically known as defeat (Types, n.d.). Explaining further, lets take the following exampleLets look into my fathers motivation of fear, anxiety, and violence which all contri thated for the most part to his frustrations. My father has always been a violent individual. He flares up oer little frustrati ons want1) when mother asks how utility bills are going to be paid this time2) when my big brother complains ab show up how small our ha smudgeation is3) when my little sister asks him to help get something at the top of the insistency4) when I ask him not to hurt or yell at my mother etc.It all started when he resigned in 1983 as a city engineer and he puts up his own and went into private construction instead. This bleak business/job of his, however, is not helpful since it is untypical, unlike when he was works for the g overnment where he receives a fixed monthly income.In fact, it is as well irregular that he cannot even provide the familys prefatory needs like food, school supplies, health insurance etc. Sometimes he has clients who would leave him to build their posts, swimming pools, renovate their homes, etc, however, most of the time he does not have anything to do, thus, most of the time he doesnt have money.He gets foreclose, and depressed, wherefore drinks, o r proceeds to the casino to play poker and does not come home until early morning. He became an alcoholic, and he also became addict to poker. He still gets contracts to build houses and other infrastructure projects but he exactly obliges to the most expensive ones.Because he is too picky, there were yet a number of offers coming in then until no offers were coming in at all, which of course contributed queen-sizedly to his frustrations. Even though large infrastructure projects were coming in then and the profits were a bit high, my father still cannot contribute to the familys needs.This is because when he gets a contract, he tends to make a loan without even making sure if it is worth(predicate) it. What happened was he earned but his debts were thrice his gains. He borrowed money from his friends but these were not enough to pay off everything.In the end, he was sued for saltation checks. He was also sued by his friends. We lost some of our properties because of the afor ementioned as well.Since then he became so frustrated and fearful, he would not come out of the room when he hears that some people knock over at our gate and then throws whatever he gets hold of, kicks whatever is available, or hit whomever is in the room with him.He feels that every time somebody comes over to visit, these people are either arresting officers who are going to wish him down to the police station for questioning or people whom he promised hed pay back on that reliable day.What he would do is to ask my mother to go outside and tell them he is not home (which makes me so scared since somebody might but hurt my mom for all her alibis or the peoples evoke might be transferred to her and she would be the one to get hurt).This situation of ours became worsened as days go by. He became so frustrated he would slap my mother when my mother refuses to give him money he would overtake on poker, throw breakable things at us when he is too irritated with his problems, unlea sh his exceedingly big guard dogs inside the house to threaten us, and countless other violent acts.There are three basic conditions which bring forth anxiety (Franken, 1994). It could be 1) Overstimulation, wherein information for a certain individual is overflowing 2) Cognitive Incongruity, wherein an individual is having difficulty reconciling with some event and 3) Response Unavailability, wherein a person does not know how to detention an excruciating situation (Franken, 1994).The three basic conditions aforementioned apply to my father. Overstimulation appears in this situation as the countless monetary problems which have too many details for him to handle. Cognitive Incongruity, on the other hand, emerges as the several cases with regards to bouncing checks and the debts he owes to other people.Response Unavailability, however, surfaces as the debts he incurs every time he gets infrastructure projects or every time he needs it. alternatively of working hard and saving, his that recourse is to borrow money which causes his downfall.This only shows as well that he does not know how to handle a difficult situation which is what exactly termed as Response Unavailability. And this increases his anxiety and frustrations.Reduction or Elimination of ViolenceFortunately, there are ways to reduce, if not totally bear away violence as suggested by the Theory of Aggression utilizedIt is all important(predicate) for my father, for example, to focus on the other components of the frustrating stimulus than the frustration (Dugan, 2004).Instead of losing stop over the irrepressible and uncontainable occurrences or instead of believing that there is no way to solve the problem, he should be self-certain meaning not only knowing his strengths but both strengths and weaknesses since if that is the case then he would not be able to cope with any stressful incident in his life since a solution to a problem is only devised when he turns his anxiety into fear and then d eal with the other components of the frustration that has been produced (Franken, 2004).ReferencesDo You invite A Problem With Violence? (n.d.). Retrieved folk 8, 2007 from http//www.daniel-sonkin.com/violence.htmlDugan, M.A. (2004). Aggression. Retrieved September 8, 2007 from http//www.beyondintractability.org/essay/aggression/Franken, R. E. (1994). Human Motivation, 3rd ed. CA Brooks/Cole Publishing Company.Smith, A.K. (1999). Theories of Aggression. Retrieved September 8, 2007 from http//serendip.brynmawr.edu/bb/neuro/neuro99/web3/Smith.htmlTypes of Aggression. (n.d.). Retrieved September 8, 2007 fromhttp//209.85.165.104/search?q=cacheq5ApqUItbrcJpsych.fullerton.edu/navarick/aggression.ppt+theories+of+aggression&038hl=tl&038ct=clnk&038cd=5&038gl=ph&038client=firefox-a

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