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in Class 12 by kratos

What are phobias? If someone had an intense **** of snakes, could this simple phobia be a result of faulty learning? Analyse how this phobia could have developed.

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+5 votes
by kratos
 
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An intense, persistent irrational ** of something that produces conscious avoidance of the feared subject, activity or situation is called a phobia**.

• Phobias can vary in degree and how much they interfere with healthy adaptation to the environment. Some otherwise normal and well-adjusted persons also have phobias.

Phobias are mainly of three types :

1. Specific phobias are those directed towards specific objects and situations and can be varied, e.g., acrophobia ( of heights), pyrophobia ( of ), and hydrophobia ( of water).

2. Social phobia is a of social situations, and people with this phobia may avoid a wide range of situations in which they they will be exposed to, scrutinized and possibly humiliated by other people.

3. Agoraphobia: is the term used when people developed a of entering unfamiliar situations. Social learning theories work on the principle that our experience be it positive or negative such as phobia of lizards/cockroaches are the result of learning process which start early in life. Small **** can play with snakes; they are not aware of the danger involved. For them it is just another play object, as they grow up the of these things are instilled by their parents and society which is reinforced and accounts for reactions like phobia. A psychoanalytical account for the same could involve attribution to some unconscious > or/and repressed experiences. For example, suppose in your childhood you watched a group of roudy boys brutally torturing a cockroach/snake, which eventually , although you going about the incidence after some days, but it might remain in back of your mind forever, which might explain your phobia to cockroaches which might remind you of the incidence and disturbs you emotionally.

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