Essentials of Investments, 12e ISE 12th/ISE
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, The Child's Tie to his Mother : Attachment Behaviour
During adolescence a child's attachment to his parents grows
weaker. Other adults may come to assume an importance equal to
or greater than that of the parents, and sexual attraction to age-
mates begins to extend the picture. As a result individual variation,
already great, becomes even greater. At one extreme are
adolescents who cut themselves off from parents; at the other are
those who remain intensely attached and are unable or unwilling to
direct their attachment behaviour to others; between the extremes
lie the great majority of adolescents whose attachment to parents
remains strong but whose ties to others are of much importance
also. For most individuals the bond to parents continues into adult
life and affects behaviour in countless ways. In many societies the
attachment of daughter to mother continues more strongly than that
of son to mother. As Young and Willmott (1957) have shown, even in
a Western urbanized society the bond between adult daughter and
mother plays a great part in social life. Finally, in old age, when
attachment behaviour can no longer be directed towards members
of an older generation, or even the same generation, it may come
instead to be directed towards members of a younger one. During
adolescence and adult life a measure of attachment behaviour is
commonly directed not only towards persons outside the family but
also towards groups and institutions other than the family. A school
or college, a work group, a religious group or a political group can
come to constitute for many people a subordinate attachment-
'figure', and for some people a principal attachment-'figure'. In such
cases, it seems probable, the development of attachment to a group
is mediated, at least initially, by attachment to a person holding a
prominent position within that group. Thus, for many a citizen
attachment to his state is a derivative of and initially dependent on
his attachment to its sovereign or president. That attachment
behaviour in adult life is a straightforward continuation of
attachment behaviour in childhood is shown by the circumstances
that lead an adult's attachment behaviour to become more readily
, elicited. In sickness and calamity, adults often become demanding of
others; in conditions of 255
Edition Zvi Bodie - eBook PDF install download
https://ebookluna.com/download/essentials-of-investments-12e-ise-
ebook-pdf/
Download more ebook instantly today - Get yours now at ebookluna.com
,Other documents randomly have
different content
, The Child's Tie to his Mother : Attachment Behaviour
During adolescence a child's attachment to his parents grows
weaker. Other adults may come to assume an importance equal to
or greater than that of the parents, and sexual attraction to age-
mates begins to extend the picture. As a result individual variation,
already great, becomes even greater. At one extreme are
adolescents who cut themselves off from parents; at the other are
those who remain intensely attached and are unable or unwilling to
direct their attachment behaviour to others; between the extremes
lie the great majority of adolescents whose attachment to parents
remains strong but whose ties to others are of much importance
also. For most individuals the bond to parents continues into adult
life and affects behaviour in countless ways. In many societies the
attachment of daughter to mother continues more strongly than that
of son to mother. As Young and Willmott (1957) have shown, even in
a Western urbanized society the bond between adult daughter and
mother plays a great part in social life. Finally, in old age, when
attachment behaviour can no longer be directed towards members
of an older generation, or even the same generation, it may come
instead to be directed towards members of a younger one. During
adolescence and adult life a measure of attachment behaviour is
commonly directed not only towards persons outside the family but
also towards groups and institutions other than the family. A school
or college, a work group, a religious group or a political group can
come to constitute for many people a subordinate attachment-
'figure', and for some people a principal attachment-'figure'. In such
cases, it seems probable, the development of attachment to a group
is mediated, at least initially, by attachment to a person holding a
prominent position within that group. Thus, for many a citizen
attachment to his state is a derivative of and initially dependent on
his attachment to its sovereign or president. That attachment
behaviour in adult life is a straightforward continuation of
attachment behaviour in childhood is shown by the circumstances
that lead an adult's attachment behaviour to become more readily
, elicited. In sickness and calamity, adults often become demanding of
others; in conditions of 255