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Related Concept Videos

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Self-concept is the cognitive and emotional understanding individuals hold about their identity. It evolves through various developmental stages, beginning in infancy and maturing as children grow. This concept influences how individuals perceive their abilities, interact with others, and manage challenges throughout life.
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Carl Rogers' Humanistic Perspective on Personality01:23

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Karen Horney's psychoanalytic theories emphasize the potential for self-realization and the importance of addressing social and cultural, rather than biological, factors in personality development. She challenged traditional Freudian views, particularly Freud's concept of "penis envy," which she argued stemmed from cultural influences rather than inherent biological differences. Horney believed that any sense of inferiority in women was a result of societal conditioning, such as...
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The Humanbecoming Concept Inventing Model: Feeling Isolated.

Teodora Duarte-Quilao1

  • 1Adjunct Faculty, Webster University Geneva, Healthcare Management, Master and Certificate, Bellevue, Switzerland.

Nursing Science Quarterly
|December 11, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study explores feeling isolated as a universal human experience using the human becoming concept inventing model. It defines isolation as turbulent seclusion stemming from uncertain affiliations, visualized through Munch

Keywords:
Parseconcept inventingfeeling isolatedhumanbecoming

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Area of Science:

  • Phenomenology
  • Human Science
  • Existential Psychology

Background:

  • Feeling isolated is a universal human experience.
  • Existing models lack a comprehensive conceptualization of isolation.
  • The human becoming concept offers a framework for understanding lived experiences.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the meaning of feeling isolated as a universal human experience.
  • To conceptualize isolation using the human becoming concept inventing model.
  • To advance the understanding of human lived experiences of isolation.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis using the human becoming concept inventing model.
  • Interpretation of Edvard Munch's artwork, 'Sick Mood at Sunset: Despair', as a theoretical statement.
  • Exploration of the phenomenon of feeling isolated through a human science lens.

Main Results:

  • Feeling isolated is conceptualized as turbulent seclusion arising from the sureness-unsureness of diverse affiliations.
  • The human becoming model provides a novel framework for understanding the origins of connecting-separating experiences.
  • Edvard Munch's artwork serves as an artistic representation of the phenomenon.

Conclusions:

  • The human becoming concept inventing model offers a novel conceptualization of feeling isolated.
  • This exploration advances the body of knowledge on universal human lived experiences.
  • Understanding isolation through this model contributes to human science scholarship.