Submitted by: Errol Labarento Lorelyn Tadeo Mark Junior Cabingas Social Relation
In social science, a social relation
or social interaction is any relationship between two or more individuals. Social Relation Social relations drive from individual agency from the basis of social structure and the basic object for analysis by social scientists. Fundamental inquiries into the nature of social relations feature in the work of sociologists such as Max Weber in his theory of social action. Social Relation According to Piotr Sztompka, forms of a relation and interaction in sociology and anthropology may be described as follows: first and most basic are animal-like behaviors, various physical movements of the body. Then there are actions – movements with a meaning and purpose. Social Relation Without symbols, our social life would be no more sophisticated than that of animals. For example, without symbols we would have no aunts or uncles, employers or teachers-or even brothers and sisters. They study face-to-face interaction, examining how people make sense out of life, how they determine their relationship. SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE BY DANIEL GOLEMAN Neuroscience has discovered that our brain’s very design makes it sociable, inexorably drawn into an intimate brain- to-brain linkup whenever we engage with another person. SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE BY DANIEL GOLEMAN During these neural linkups, our brains engage in an emotional tango, a dance of feelings. Our social interactions operate as modulators, something like interpersonal thermostats that continually reset key aspects of our brain function as they orchestrate our emotions. SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE BY DANIEL GOLEMAN The resulting feelings have far-reaching consequences, it turn rippling throughout our body, sending out cascades of hormones that regulate biological systems from our heart to immune cells. The brain-to-brain link allows our strongest relationships to shape us in ways as benign as whether we laugh at the same jokes or as profound as which genes are activated in t-cells, the immune system’s foot soldiers in the constant battle against invading bacteria and viruses. SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE BY DANIEL GOLEMAN Virtually all the major scientific discoveries I draw on this volume have emerged since Emotional Intelligence appeared in 1995, and they continue to surface at a quickening pace. SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE BY DANIEL GOLEMAN Take for example, empathy, the sensing of another person’s feelings that allows rapport. Empathy is an individual ability, one that resides inside the person. But rapport only arises between people, as a property the emerges from their interaction. Here the spotlight shift to those ephemeral moments that emerge as we interact. These take on deep consequence as we realize how, through their sum total, we create one another. Goodbye..