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State the standard psychological definition of aggression as presented in the context, and identify the three core components necessary to classify an action as aggression based on this definition.
Question: State the standard psychological definition of aggression as presented in the context, and identify the three core components necessary to classify an action as aggression based on this definition.
Sample answer: According to the psychological definition, aggression is any behavior intended to cause harm or pain to another person. The three core components required to classify an action as aggression are: 1) it must be an actual behavior or action rather than an internal feeling or thought, 2) there must be a conscious intent or motivation to cause harm or pain, and 3) the recipient or target of the action must be another person.
Key points:
- Aggression is defined as behavior intended to cause harm or pain to another person.
- The behavior must be an active or observable behavior, not just a passive feeling.
- There must be a clear intent to cause pain or harm.
- The behavior must be directed at another person rather than inanimate objects.
Rubric: The response must define aggression as behavior intended to cause harm or pain to another person. It must also list all three components: the requirement of an observable behavior, the requirement of intent, and the target being another human being.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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