Social Development: Crash Course Sociology #13

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  • Опубликовано: 24 сен 2024
  • What makes you… you? How did you get to be that way? Today we’re talking about social development, starting with the role of nature and nurture in influencing a person’s development. We’ll discuss socialization, the importance of care & human interaction, as well as theories of development from a range of theorists.
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Комментарии • 271

  • @subtledating1562
    @subtledating1562 4 года назад +73

    Parents have a TREMENDOUS impact on who we become as adults. We spend the majority of our childhood (18 years) with them - so they have a HUGE influence on who we become

  • @tosht2515
    @tosht2515 7 лет назад +101

    The effects of social isolation is important to discuss as well as extreme isolation but Anna is not the best case study. (As a side, Anna may have been discovered in a shed but she was kept in a room in the family home.) Kingsley Davis himself said that Anna's case is flawed because Anna's mother was mentally disabled so heredity may be in play with Anna's development. Also, Anna was not given ideal post rescue treatment/education which may have influenced her lack of advancement. Still a very sad case and yes, social isolation is extremely detrimental.

    • @charliecastillo2011
      @charliecastillo2011 7 лет назад +8

      Tosh T Before Anna was mentioned in the video, I thought it was going to talk about Genie, an American girl who went through a similar situation.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genie_(feral_child)

  • @ycordero59
    @ycordero59 7 лет назад +337

    Thanks for another great video on sociology! Totally loving this series, Nicole (and team)! ❤️

  • @ProfessorPolitics
    @ProfessorPolitics 7 лет назад +4

    Not to discount the fantastic explanation of these developmental paradigms, I did think it was important to point out that a number of biologists argue that thinking about "nature" and "nurture" as being dichotomous is pretty artificial. Very very little is expressed solely by genetics and very very little can solely be explained by society. What matters, instead, is how these forces *interact* with each other. It's rarely nature or nurture but rather nature AND nurture that explains our behavior.
    Also, as an aside, I love how you guys write these to make them accessible to those who haven't seen the preceding episodes. Gonna start working my way back!

  • @talayafrancois652
    @talayafrancois652 5 лет назад +164

    African, Asian, and Latino psychologists and sociologists would enhance these courses by adding different perspectives and more information

  • @lauravilbiks
    @lauravilbiks 7 лет назад +81

    On the slide of Erik Erikson there's a question "Gues what his middle name is?" and well, turns out it's Erik Homburger Erikson :D

  • @poorplayer9249
    @poorplayer9249 7 лет назад +6

    There's always so much good info in this series. The five theories of development put me in mind of The Bard's seven ages of man. Arguably, another astute observer of the study of social problems, in his own right. Thanks Nicole and Crash Course!

  • @kamasoutrek
    @kamasoutrek 7 лет назад +66

    I believe the Shoulder devil and angel analogy to be an inadequat choice, enclosing Freud's topic into a binary system of value. Both the id and the super ego are neither moraly nor religiously good or bad.
    They just are.
    One of Freud's greatest influences on our society was to weaken the Church's denny of our most basic needs, and this analogy takes a step back.

    • @ShawnRavenfire
      @ShawnRavenfire 7 лет назад +8

      Agree. I think that a lot of the things we consider "good" come from the id, like the way we feel empathy for others could be stemming from the primal instinct to form social bonds to help the tribe survive. Alternatively, "evil" things can come from the superego, like someone who was educated in a fascist state might feel compelled by social norms to be violent toward outsiders.

    • @connorp3030
      @connorp3030 7 лет назад +6

      She misrepresented the entire idea really. For example, the ego is not just the mediator between the ID and super ego, it's just the conscious mind, that mediates the desires of the ID, expectations of the superego, and the constraints of reality to make decisions.

    • @kamasoutrek
      @kamasoutrek 7 лет назад +6

      I understand your point, and I must agree to some extent.
      Nevertheless, I also realise that although very logical, it relies on the predicate that I'm ''paying too much attention to the moral roles of the angel and devil on the shoulder''. The fact is that I did not choose to pay this much attention.
      I come here as an average viewer, far from any kind of specialisation, and this is how I understood the analogy. Could I be the exception, the only mind who found an inapropriate trace of moral judgment? The comments above let me believe that I'm not.
      I assume that this heterogeneity is partly due to cultural differences. You mention the King James Version of the Bible. Well I'm not from Christian Anglo-Saxon descent, nor do I live in an English speaking country, and it seems that you pop-culture is not the same as mine, for in mine, the angel/devil dual symbolic is still close to it's religious roots.
      Therefor, I believe to find a compromise in writing that this choice in analogy, although very speaking and efficient within an Anlgo-Saxon cultural paradigm, is far from universal.
      I thank you for opening my eyes to a new understanding of cultural gaps.

  • @saadhasnain
    @saadhasnain 7 лет назад +30

    This has been my favorite CC Sociology lesson. 👌👌

  • @fangirlfortheages5940
    @fangirlfortheages5940 7 лет назад +8

    This area is super interesting to me. I'm in a research program at my school and I'm hoping to do something like this next year. Thanks u guys!

  • @noahpparentreason1581
    @noahpparentreason1581 7 лет назад +5

    I had an exam on this exact topic today, it also involved the agents of socialisation and Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs which is something I'd love to see a video on. I love the series by the way of you hadn't caught on already.

  • @elliotstahlmann7589
    @elliotstahlmann7589 5 лет назад +6

    I love your videos, they're always so informative! You need to do more videos on post-modernity and digital sociology/economy!

  • @alexanderryan-jones600
    @alexanderryan-jones600 7 лет назад +10

    Best episode yet :)
    (Do you think you could add a second break between sentences and perhaps keep a graphic at the side of the screen (like the one at the end of the video) so we can keep things focuses?)
    Would sure help me.

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics 7 лет назад +25

    6:00 I wish to explore this difference further.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics 7 лет назад +2

      Humbly, I also believe it would be interesting to explore more about the negative side effects at later stages of social development. Especially those that may be focused on the current social isolation trends associated with social media.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics 7 лет назад

      weesh ful
      Thanks for your reply and perspective.
      How do you feel about your own personality type, and it's influence on your observations of these types of traits? Do you believe that can influence your perspective?
      Also, how would you qualify/quantify your observation with respects to introverted versus extraverted personalities that may be more or less vocal about their individual feelings and values?

    • @andy4an
      @andy4an 7 лет назад +1

      My personality is very empathetic. I try to see things from other people's perspective, and I assume the best in them until they prove me wrong. I try not to assume things about people, and to let them show me what works for them.
      I teach in a way that is conducive to a wide range of personality types. Not the best at it, but I try, and can often tell when I've made a mistake, so I'm getting better.
      I work hard to break my larger groups up into smaller groups so that the introverted kids have space to talk. I like groups of about 4-5 kids, because the introverts will probably talk in that size of group.
      Also, you have to build trust generally, but ESPECIALLY with the introverts.
      Many kids tend to be open with me quickly, because I listen, and treat them like maturing adults, and validate their feelings and answers. But I've had kids that still took like 8 sessions before they opened up to me.
      Since I'm open-minded, I look for and find the boys and girls that are exceptions to the generalities.
      That was a bit of a spitball at your questions, but hopefully it helped.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics 7 лет назад

      weesh ful
      As a consistent INTJ on a Myers-Briggs scale, I find few people understand how I think or what I find interesting.
      Most of the time certain aspects of an INTJ are highlighted, but the negatives are overlooked. The largest of which I believe to be a low level of emotional development. I grew up having a hard time understanding why so much of the world seems to focus on emotions and relationships above, beyond, and often in conflict with intuitive reasoning.
      Personally I found it difficult to come to terms with statements like boys like one thing but later develop emotionally or develop awareness. I must actively seek out and consciously structure my social interactions to appear more conventionally minded. If I had known this at an earlier age it would have saved me a lot of grief.
      I also appear extraverted to many outside observers due to my ability to discuss almost any subject with depth and apparent openness. Most people are unaware of what I find intriguing about subjects, while I am totally oblivious to their emotional understanding and investment in a conversation, subject, or relationship.
      That's simply a more rare perspective on this subject from someone who falls on the fringe of personality types.

    • @loganbohlinger8692
      @loganbohlinger8692 7 лет назад

      Gillian's findings lead to the development of one of the newest ethical frameworks in philosophy called the ethics of care. It's pretty dope, you should look it up

  • @luciapuchades98
    @luciapuchades98 7 лет назад +7

    As a Psychology student that knows about his theory on psychosexual development, when Freud was mentioned I wanted to scream

  • @Sordatos
    @Sordatos 7 лет назад +7

    Studies suggests that peers, as in friends, class mates are way more determination on how a person turns out than parents ( taking aside genetics of course)

  • @AudioOrchardMusic
    @AudioOrchardMusic 5 лет назад +11

    The story of Anna just wrecks me...

  • @alisonyroses
    @alisonyroses 4 года назад +2

    Nature vs Nurture, Freud- how personalities dev
    Piaget 4 Stages
    Khol's moral and Gilligan's expansion moral on boy/girl
    Herbert Mead- symbolic interactionism
    touch on Erikson

  • @kimlip_tree2009
    @kimlip_tree2009 Год назад +1

    " I love meeting people's parents. It's like seeing a manual on why people are crazy" -ted lasso

  • @Teo117
    @Teo117 2 года назад

    I'm learning an enourmous amount. Thank you for your time and effort. I'm grateful.

  • @christinegorskikh545
    @christinegorskikh545 7 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this amazing lesson,dear creaotors)
    Your channel takes me an opportunity to improve my "English Level" every day.

  • @andy4an
    @andy4an 7 лет назад +1

    I spend a great deal of time teaching and interacting with a variety of 4th graders, who are about 10.
    I love it immensely because pretty much all of them are ALREADY at the Formal Operational Stage.
    Back when I interacted more broadly with kids 7-12, I was frequently impressed by 9 year olds that were already there.
    12 is close, but seems late to me.
    Or maybe it was more accurate back in the day?

  • @ghania5869
    @ghania5869 4 года назад +2

    I like how Nicole mentioned Freud's theory of the psyche. I also liked how she used it to compare the psychology side of sociology. Nice work! :)

  • @mrscary3105
    @mrscary3105 7 лет назад +3

    Nicole is stunning, and intelligent.
    (Great charisma as well, she will rock in edutainment)

    • @andrewr311
      @andrewr311 4 года назад +1

      Though I agree, I have to listen on 0.75 speed.

  • @jayyad1
    @jayyad1 6 лет назад +1

    great information provided,that also get to the bank of my knowledge .it means in short we can say about the topic that what you speaks reflects how yours parents treated you in your childhood .
    nice saying by someone that " give me good mothers i will give you good nation".

  • @kizofio
    @kizofio 7 лет назад

    This is waaaaay better than my lecturer teaching. She only basically say everything that is already in the notes ==

  • @Davao420
    @Davao420 7 лет назад

    I am sooo loving this series. I love CC, like very much

  • @intriguedbystander4859
    @intriguedbystander4859 7 лет назад +20

    0:53
    Cultural Diversity~ It mean you've have caught every Alola Pokèmon.

  • @sourcedrop7624
    @sourcedrop7624 7 лет назад

    so as i understand it, our minds process information not only within itself, but also by projecting it and testing it against other minds. this social processing of info is such a large part of how the mind works that if you isolate a person they will become less of themselves, like the 8 year old girl being at a similar level as a 2 year old.

  • @Hiphop101ize
    @Hiphop101ize 7 лет назад

    this is literally my developmental psychology lecture today

  • @akashmishra2644
    @akashmishra2644 7 лет назад +1

    We talked about this in school today!!

  • @sonyakaminska
    @sonyakaminska 7 лет назад

    One of the best episodes so far!

  • @GamingwithKetones
    @GamingwithKetones 6 лет назад

    Nature or Nurture, inherited or learned/acquired. Our world or lens rather, is cultivated by the society we are apart of or in close proximity with, influence our lives going forward into adulthood and beyond. Liked the combination of sociological and psychological ideas in this video!
    - James

  • @vaibhavirai3502
    @vaibhavirai3502 7 лет назад +1

    Crash Course is the best thing ever. Thank you for making short yet extremely informative videos.

  • @sharjeelahmad3457
    @sharjeelahmad3457 4 года назад

    Thank you for making sociology easy for me!

  • @brucewaynegaines8202
    @brucewaynegaines8202 7 лет назад

    Excellent ... thank you from Rhode Island Nurses Institute Middle College Charter School, Providence, RI!

  • @vanessatan4602
    @vanessatan4602 7 лет назад

    this section is so relatable

  • @abidinglove3409
    @abidinglove3409 7 лет назад

    Looking forward to Crash Course Linguistics!

  • @ALocalFolf
    @ALocalFolf Год назад

    5:38
    Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale, a tale of a social trip.

  • @voltrondefenderoftheuniver6222
    @voltrondefenderoftheuniver6222 7 лет назад +16

    question.. as far as people growing after high School. why are we seeing many subcultures (goth emo scene) persist in many folks well past high school? I'm seeing people age 25 still dressing as ash from Pokemon.

    • @dylanrodrigues
      @dylanrodrigues 7 лет назад +32

      Age is not a restriction when it's your likes and interests, especially when it comes to pop culture, hobbies, clothes, etc. We all have something that we're way too much into, and probably shouldn't be, but are into anyways because it keeps us sane.

    • @ShawnRavenfire
      @ShawnRavenfire 7 лет назад +3

      I have a hypothesis that people born during the Cold War subconsciously didn't expect to survive into adulthood because of nuclear annihilation, so we never bothered to learn how to "adult."

    • @melonlord1414
      @melonlord1414 7 лет назад +10

      I guess the interesting thing about being a grown up is, that you define your self what it means to be one as long as you are ready to deal with the consequences. I am in my late 20s and my profile picture is from a kids show but I probably wouldn't walk around in coseplay in my everyday live. So I guess it depends strongly on your souroundings how you act.

    • @darlagoddesshate
      @darlagoddesshate 7 лет назад +9

      subcultures exist in many forms. daughters of the revolution is a subculture. the Baptists church has a subculture. That has always existed and has little to do with constructs of what is "age appropriate". Now if you want to know why people still like Pokemon, or say why people still obsess over Elvis then that's a whole other question

    • @torilee6677
      @torilee6677 7 лет назад +2

      Wearing certain clothing or cosplaying has nothing to do with maturity.
      Now my mother acting like a high school mean girl in her late 40s, on the other hand.....

  • @bittybaby22
    @bittybaby22 4 года назад +1

    Dang, this would been helpful to find *before* I wrote my essay on communication and emotional development..... Maybe for the next paper.

  • @alliegirouard6915
    @alliegirouard6915 7 лет назад +1

    Great video! I loved your integration of a few psychological concepts to flesh out your points.

  • @mariaterezasanchez884
    @mariaterezasanchez884 7 лет назад

    do one on SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND HEALTH

  • @hole1stdrillpresschannel
    @hole1stdrillpresschannel 7 лет назад +21

    I am what I am and what I am needs no excuses...

  • @rblifestyle5941
    @rblifestyle5941 7 лет назад

    You should do a video on the interaction with relationships

  • @goglee2440
    @goglee2440 7 лет назад

    big thumbs up
    it was a serious question that captured my mind for a while
    waiting for your new video 😊

  • @thomaschase1719
    @thomaschase1719 7 лет назад

    Great vid, good not thinking mind food for that other individualistic whatever. I'd recently decided to bail on ever read "The World According To Garp," and watched the warner brothers film featuring Robbin Williams. Surreal humor although poignant thought like mowing the grass for some as a literary fodder for cognitive action. The two resources made for an interesting combination.

  • @Crashing_CSS
    @Crashing_CSS Год назад

    best course best episode

  • @Migbie
    @Migbie Год назад

    thank you for this !!!

  • @junaidmajeed3222
    @junaidmajeed3222 6 лет назад

    Ur all videos helped me a lot love u

  • @manoranjanbehera1595
    @manoranjanbehera1595 6 лет назад

    Ur reach so super...
    Please reach slowly but surely

  • @emanboatengjr
    @emanboatengjr 7 лет назад

    Great Video!

  • @EmethMatthew
    @EmethMatthew 7 лет назад

    Great stuff!

  • @murrymumba6914
    @murrymumba6914 5 лет назад

    thanks madam...u are helpin us indeed

  • @InesLDias
    @InesLDias 5 лет назад

    How can I read about the Anna's case study? There is an article written by Kingsley Davis anywhere?

  • @siryoucantdothat9743
    @siryoucantdothat9743 4 года назад

    Im trying to get meaning in all of this psychology - sociology sciences to live a healthier mental life quality i never had i was basically raised by madness and insanity coupled with strict rules and emotional dereliction and its been my drive for a long time its taken me to these places where i learn more about our minds hoping that i can get meaning of who am i
    why do i think/act and feel the way i do is it all a product of an environment or is it something else maybe genetics are the reason behind the structure of my personality or is there even a meaning behind all of this.
    sometimes i feel that i dont have feeling or my cognitive functions are failing me to really perceive the world the way it truly is its like living in a delusion or am i going insane i keep riding of people / family / friends because their presence is heavy it feels like the air get sucked out the room and it exhaust me even the slightest noise can get into my nerves or the premise of pain is like a knife to the heart and it should be avoided at any cost and it make no sense to me how did i got there its like getting fed up from living

  • @btdtpro
    @btdtpro 7 лет назад +4

    Why didn't they mention any studies involving children adopted at ages younger than one years old, but still growing up to have many behavioral similarities to their birth parents instead of their adoptive parents?
    I had a feeling their conclusions would learn more towards nurture over nature, despite the scientific community generally learning towards nature over nurture.
    Yes, traumatic situations like being raised alone in a shed will effect a child, but that isn't really a big marker to show that nurture plays a bigger role than nature. In fact, if five different kids when raise alone in separate sheds, then removed from the sheds and all raised by the same set of people, those five kids would likely hadn't that situation differently.
    Take the same exact person and have them deal with a situation, then pump a bunch of testosterone or estrogen into their system and have them deal with the same situation again, that they're likely deal with if and be impacted by it differently.. and I don't bring up testosterone and estrogen to specify men and women, since even among men and women, hormone levels vary. Two men can have pretty different levels of hormones, and two women could as well.
    Look up many transgender stories and how much taking hormones effected them. Even if they were passing as a gender for years, once they took the hormones many felt changes in behavior... it could be argued it's a placebo effect, and they just feel like the hormones are impacting their behavior, but it just being a placebo effect doesn't line up with other studies on the hormones.
    Though on the side of nurture; hormone levels can be impacted by diet and social environment.

    • @lacyb2510
      @lacyb2510 4 года назад

      Surely this is more psychology than sociology?

  • @technicalpronghorn4210
    @technicalpronghorn4210 7 лет назад

    nice u r devoted for me BA student thanks a lots sis

  • @kuronosan
    @kuronosan 7 лет назад

    Inherent spark of Eunice.

  • @JK-ff8xf
    @JK-ff8xf 7 лет назад +42

    Gene's vs meme's

  • @TokyoTraveller
    @TokyoTraveller 7 лет назад +3

    "...but whether you feel like it or not, adulthood will come for us all."
    tell that to the President.

  • @Ameera2532
    @Ameera2532 6 лет назад

    Really Goooooooood !

  • @KRIGBERT
    @KRIGBERT 7 лет назад

    Piaget's theory of developmental stages has been challenged in a number of ways - e.g. it's been found that younger children are a lot more capable and less self-centered than he thought.

  • @Didacmmv
    @Didacmmv 7 лет назад

    Could the chain be broken at any point? I guess these stages may not have the same duration based on the subject, maybe some don't even happen at all? Argggg, I'm burning for more!

  • @itsimaginationtime
    @itsimaginationtime 6 лет назад +1

    This crash course about social development is 25 years behind the current science. Source: I have a masters in sociology with concentration in social development.

  • @Heavy2deep
    @Heavy2deep 6 лет назад

    Perfect!

  • @ShamanCore23
    @ShamanCore23 7 лет назад

    A girl saying that "A baby grabbing youre finger is the cutest thing in the world" is a nice opening when talking about nature vs nurture...

  • @waqasaps
    @waqasaps 6 лет назад

    what was nature vs nurture, i didnt heard you saying that once?

  • @moltimor4370
    @moltimor4370 6 лет назад

    3:15 Is that an Arrested Development reference?

  • @KarlSnarks
    @KarlSnarks 2 года назад

    Some people never fully develop past the "it's a law/social norm so it is bad/good" stage I've noticed ;)

  • @jeet5464
    @jeet5464 6 лет назад

    Pls explain. Social human and gender development

  • @yes_cassi
    @yes_cassi 5 лет назад

    may I get presentation form of this crash episode

  • @alexdavinci9533
    @alexdavinci9533 7 лет назад

    All the psychologists she talked​ about deserve a video or a series of videos of their own.

  • @rudimentaryflavo
    @rudimentaryflavo 6 лет назад +1

    I heard "inherent sense of Eunice". Yes. I am Eunice.

  • @bsinita_wokeone
    @bsinita_wokeone 7 лет назад

    i like😊 this episode. i 👍💗 really like this episode because anything about parenthood👪 im interested in........yet im not even parent?😕 or even sure i want be.😅😅

  • @bens5859
    @bens5859 7 лет назад

    Anyone know if there are any differences between males and females in terms of moral behavior in the pre-conventional stage of development?

  • @evelinaaquafina5630
    @evelinaaquafina5630 7 лет назад +37

    Surely this is psychology not sociology I'm confused?

    • @andariel125
      @andariel125 7 лет назад +74

      A lot of sciences are closely related and sometimes overlap.

    • @mormegil231
      @mormegil231 7 лет назад +45

      Actually they both overlap on many subjects...

    • @teszter704
      @teszter704 7 лет назад +52

      There is this thing called social psychology.

    • @anndguevarra
      @anndguevarra 7 лет назад +1

      lol

    • @torilee6677
      @torilee6677 7 лет назад +16

      You really can't do sociology with psychology. They're both about how humans work, they're going to overlap considerably.

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics 7 лет назад +2

    Crash Course Ad Sense Ad on Crash Course video, to a subscriber?

  • @NeonsStyleHD
    @NeonsStyleHD 7 лет назад

    Neats wrong. I have a family with over 234 members, and I've watched them all grow up, and in some members of the family there are very clear signs as early as 3 years old of their future path, which was true over and over. You also keep devloping as an adult for the rest of your days

  • @mesrobvartavarian2914
    @mesrobvartavarian2914 7 лет назад +1

    More a child psychology vid than a sociology one.

  • @ItsAnonymousGuy
    @ItsAnonymousGuy 4 года назад +1

    We all know freud didn't just like cigars

  • @clumpymold
    @clumpymold 7 лет назад

    Erik Homburger Erikson. Homburger is his middle name?

  • @gardenhead92
    @gardenhead92 7 лет назад +3

    Halp how to adult?

  • @junaidmajeed3222
    @junaidmajeed3222 6 лет назад

    Lovely

  • @williamlag7939
    @williamlag7939 7 лет назад +15

    I just love sociology where everyone is so advanced that they don't need old fashioned things..... Like proof
    -exurb1a

  • @billyboy7089
    @billyboy7089 4 года назад

    Loving the series so far. But I'm lost as to your antonymic description of the ego? "The voice of reason" couldn't be further from the truth.

  • @mawgans.9646
    @mawgans.9646 7 лет назад +1

    3:15 Bob's BURGERS!!

  • @deniz02010
    @deniz02010 6 лет назад

    Türkçe altyazı ekleyebilir misiniz?

  • @aaronyu2660
    @aaronyu2660 7 лет назад

    Now that subject in psychology seems to be a bit twisted in how they learn things... until u talked about stages, but the senses therefore create bias, not culture, but self senses since they don't understand culture. As a kid's brain develop, the biological function might have shaped a baby, that would even colors as they might cry in pain. Brains can be altered by societal interactions, so therefore can mask what they like. But yes, almost children's children are observed to go through those stages that way.

  • @dr.chiropractor6156
    @dr.chiropractor6156 6 лет назад +1

    Do you actually talk this way in your day to day communications with people?

  • @numericalcode
    @numericalcode Год назад

    Maybe we can teach AI’s to go through Piagetian stages

  • @alihaleem8264
    @alihaleem8264 7 лет назад

    In my experience, I have a laugh like CGP Grey and say stuff half my classmates don't understand because I listen to too much Hello Internet (but you can never listen to too much of it.) I also curse and have/make too many puns, sarcasm, snarkiness, and dickishness because of RUclips comments.

  • @adarshakumar6766
    @adarshakumar6766 5 лет назад

    let's make a social group of sociology

  • @airigami1238
    @airigami1238 7 лет назад +1

    12th

  • @haiszx
    @haiszx 4 года назад

    so THATS why when me and my friends played house we always had the family love to party-its what our parents did every time all of us hung out

  • @jhonatanhernandez3568
    @jhonatanhernandez3568 5 лет назад

    Stan Lee cameo in the bus at 0:55

  • @Pakanahymni
    @Pakanahymni 7 лет назад

    This course references Freud way too much

  • @kenng2325
    @kenng2325 6 лет назад

    good

  • @jokingbat5
    @jokingbat5 7 лет назад

    Is it Jon 'Snow' sitting in the iron throne?

  • @ricardodiazcollado813
    @ricardodiazcollado813 6 лет назад

    Rand fanatics should watch this video... I've heard a lot of them start arguments like this: "IF humans are social animals, and that's a big IF..." hahaha