Thursday, November 28, 2019
Sports And Aggressive Behavior Essays - Dispute Resolution, Emotions
  Sports and Aggressive Behavior    Sport and aggressive behavior, Do sports create aggressive behavior, or                   simply attract people who are already aggressive? Aggression and sport have                   gone together as long as sports have been around, be it the players                   themselves, to the parents, coaches, or spectators, they just seem to be an                   inseparable part of each other. The term violence is defined as physical                   assault based on total disregard for the well being of self and others, or the                   intent to injure another person ( 2. Coakley). Intimidation usually does not                   cause physical harm, but often is designed to produce psychological                   consequences, enabling one person to physically over power or dominate                   another. These statements as defined by the author, Jay J. Coakley, is what                   people today have made a must part on sport. Pleasure and participation                   sports absolutely cannot be grouped with power and performance sports                   when in relation to aggression.Pleasure sports are simply played for pleasure.                   Score is usually not kept. The athletes participating are usually on occasion                   doing it for fun and exercise. A majority of athletes who have been playing                   sports since they were little, have probably been pounded into their heads                   that to be successful in sport, you need to be aggressive, and at some times,                   unnecessary. Also that to get what you want, you have to go at it with all                   force. Not that this is wrong but, this attitude in today's society has been a                   major problem factor to the athletes when they get older, to get into trouble                   with the law. Those long-term effects of so called discipline, patterns                   develops these destructive behaviors. (9. Montague) Although some people                   are still in belief that aggressive behaviors in all forms, are grounded into                   instincts, but they also relate these actions to sports. Their parents played,                   who were known for their aggressive behavior, so the child feels that they                   have to live up to that expectation.( 6. Storr) Athletes do have to be                   aggressive to a point, so that the team can form a strategy to win. There is                   also a limit to aggression when it turns into violence. People might say that it's                   not aggression or violence, it's just adrenaline pumping. Adrenaline isn't even                   similar to violence. Aggression, maybe, but nothing that would be harmful to                   anyone else. This might be a factor to why contact sports are so popular. For                   example, football, hockey, rugby, wrestling, and boxing. Contrary to                   predictions of instinct theory, several studies show that contact sports exist                   and thrive in the same societies that have high rates of aggression and                   violence. Unfortunately, another belief is that contact sports teach discipline,                   self-respect, and self-defense. (8. May ) Contact sports aren't a positive way                   to teach these things. Being physically tough helps, but it also needs to be left                   on the field when the game is over. This can also lead to the abuse of family,                   girlfriends, boyfriends, friends, and any other person who gets in their "way",                   because athletes use these sports as a way to get their aggression and angers                   out. ( 10. Hauser, Powers, Noam ) Other's might argue that it's skill, and not                   in the least way violent. Although we really can't give a straight and to the                   point answer to the question "Is aggression an Instinct?" We can say that in                   man, as in other animals, there exists a physiological mechanism, when                   stimulated, it rises both subjective feelings of anger and to physical changes,                   which relate to fighting. This is easily set off, and like other emotional                   responses, it is very stereotyped, and instinctive. Just like one person is like a                   very angry person; they resemble one another at the psychological level. The                   way in which humans adapt to and control their feelings of rage. ( 5. Toch)                   The mechanisms in which these body changes, the functions that come about                   is still completely misunderstood. ( 5. Toch) Experiments from animal's show                   that it appears that there is a small area from the base of the brain in which                   the feeling of anger starts. This, from which is sent to the nervous impulses                   that cause the blood pressure to rise. This area is called the hypothalamus. Its                   function is to coordinate responses    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.