Social alienation is a person's feeling of disconnection from a group – whether friends, family, or wider society – to which the individual has an affinity.
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Social alienation is a person's feeling of disconnection from a group – whether friends, family, or wider society – to which the individual has an affinity.
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Such alienation has been described as "a condition in social relationships reflected by a low degree of integration or common values and a high degree of distance or isolation between individuals, or between an individual and a group of people in a community or work environment [enumeration added]".
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Term Social alienation has been used over the ages with varied and sometimes contradictory meanings.
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Social alienation argued that people could be disturbed by emotional states and social conditions, without necessarily having lost their reason, as had generally been assumed.
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Marx's theory of Social alienation is articulated most clearly in the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 and The German Ideology.
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Marx's concepts of alienation have been classed into four types by Kostas Axelos: economic and social alienation, political alienation, human alienation, and ideological alienation.
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Marx believed that Social alienation is a systematic result of capitalism.
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Social alienation's theory relies on Feuerbach's The Essence of Christianity, which argues that the idea of God has alienated the characteristics of the human being.
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Marx wrote, in a curtailed manner, that capitalist owners experience Social alienation, through benefiting from the economic machine by endlessly competing, exploiting others and maintaining mass Social alienation in society.
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When referring to ideological Social alienation, Axelos proposes that Marx believes that all religions divert people away from "their true happiness" and instead turn them towards "illusory happiness".
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Figures associated with critical theory, in particular with the Frankfurt School, such as Theodor Adorno and Erich Fromm, developed theories of Social alienation, drawing on neo-Marxist ideas as well as other influences including neo-Freudian and sociological theories.
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The parental alienation might be due to specific influences from either parent or could result from the social dynamics of the family as a whole.
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Indeed, emotional Social alienation is said to be a common way of life for many, whether it is experienced as overwhelming, unacknowledged in the midst of a socioeconomic race, or contributes to seemingly unrelated problems.
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Social alienation isolation refers to "The feeling of being segregated from one's community".
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One manifestation of the above dimensions of Social alienation can be a feeling of estrangement from the political system and a lack of engagement therein.
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Until early in the 20th century, psychological problems were referred to in psychiatry as states of mental Social alienation, implying that a person had become separated from themselves, their reason or the world.
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Social alienation suggests that the central theme of The Matrix is the "all-pervasive yet increasingly invisible prevalence of alienation in the world today, and difficulties that accompany attempts to overcome it".
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