The discrepancy between a person's self-concept and aspects of his or her experience is called _____

a. induction
b. indifference
c. inhibition
d. incongruence

ANS: D
FEEDBACK: Incongruence is defined as the discrepancy between a person's self-concept and aspects of his or her experience. We learn to evaluate experiences, and to accept or reject them, not in terms of how they contribute to our overall actualization tendency, but in terms of whether they bring positive regard from others.

Psychology

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Which of the following psychologists would be most likely to

argue that free will is something that does not truly exist, and that we are simply unaware of the environmental influences that affect our behaviors at any given moment? A) B. F. Skinner B) Sigmund Freud C) Wilhelm Wundt D) Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

Psychology

All of the following can be performed by the concrete operational child EXCEPT:

A) associativity. B) combinativity. C) hypothetical-deductive thinking. D) identity or nullifiability.

Psychology