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AP Psychology 2.3 Motivation and Emotion 12 Views


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AP Psychology 2.3 Motivation and Emotion. How would a drive theorist explain that Jane wants to be respected by her peers?

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English Language

Transcript

00:04

Here's your shmoop du jour brought to you by respect. Something

00:07

no one riding a Segway has ever been familiar with.. All right how would a drive [people riding a segway down a walkway]

00:12

theorists explain that Janine wants to be respected by her peers right here are the

00:17

possible answers, we're thinking about a drive theorist, a drive theorist

00:22

could've had 10 jokes about golf there, but we didn't. Okay first let's take a look at drive

00:26

theory drive; theory states that the body generates a feeling of need or drive for

00:31

food sleep water sex and other biological factors and no the need to [drive theory examples of biological factors]

00:36

get a pony does not count as a biological factor so you can drop the act all [girl walks with her pony]

00:40

right would it be A all people have an instinct for respect and acceptance well

00:45

respect and acceptance aren't primary biological urges rather they fall more [two dogs in the park]

00:51

into the category of tangibles that don't directly affect biological needs.

00:55

This doesn't fit with drive theory so we can cross off A and we can also cross off

00:58

D here because as we said the desire for respect isn't a primary biological need

01:04

all right well how about B respect is high on the hierarchy of needs and leads

01:08

to self-actualization this may be true but again it doesn't involve biological [girl sat on her bed with a pizza and a laptop]

01:13

urges self-actualization comes from a number of other factors built off of

01:18

these biological needs a drive theorist wouldn't use this argument to describe [golfer driving the ball down the course]

01:22

Janine's need for respect so we can get rid of B. Alright could it be C the

01:26

body craves an optimal amount of excitement and peer respect leads to

01:30

this well while it's true that some people do seem to crave a certain amount [baby wearing sunglasses wheels across a play area]

01:33

of excitement in their lives, excitement isn't a primary biological need so it

01:37

doesn't fit into the drive theory we cross off C from our list then we're

01:41

left with E the drive theory focuses on the body's primary and secondary needs

01:45

and doesn't fully explain the need for self respect there's a reason none of [Woman appears on stage in front of a red curtain]

01:50

the other answers have really made sense thus far like we said earlier the self

01:53

respect thing isn't a biological need it's an intangible so drive theory isn't [self respect separated from biological needs]

01:58

very useful for explaining it. A more useful theory would be incentive theory

02:02

which better explains the motivation to attain intangibles so the correct answer [money, gummybears and a trophy appear]

02:07

is E, alright so what have we learned drive theory only goes so far in explaining

02:11

motivation for things that aren't biological necessities

02:13

food, water.. oreo's, yeah you know the basics [hand picks up an oreo]

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