1992
DOI: 10.1002/j.2161-007x.1992.tb00784.x
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Growing Pains: A Theory of Stress and Moral Conflict

Abstract: This article outlines a relationship between the crises that create stress in our lives and periods of instability in moral development. Stressful issues, we suggest, are more difficult to resolve during periods of developmental instability. When problems are most stressful we often experience the impact of that stress physiologically. The physiological symptoms of stress, we argue, reflect unresolved problems in primary relationships that occurred during the early (sensorimotor) developmental stages when feel… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…38 Johannsen emphasized the purity of genetic material; 39 he considered "the genotype as a whole as the elementary species and the pure line, as the key permanent biological type." 40 In the early 1900s, with the expanding practice of plant breeding, the understanding that genetic purity is rare and actually leads to instability was increasingly overtaken by the understanding that genetic purity and stability are indicative of quality and replicability. 41 Early geneticists considered genetic identity to be independent of environmental influence; that is, gene expression is not influenced by the plant's environment but is primarily or exclusively influenced by the internal genetic makeup of the plant (i.e.…”
Section: The Scientific (Ir)rationale Of the Dus Requirementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…38 Johannsen emphasized the purity of genetic material; 39 he considered "the genotype as a whole as the elementary species and the pure line, as the key permanent biological type." 40 In the early 1900s, with the expanding practice of plant breeding, the understanding that genetic purity is rare and actually leads to instability was increasingly overtaken by the understanding that genetic purity and stability are indicative of quality and replicability. 41 Early geneticists considered genetic identity to be independent of environmental influence; that is, gene expression is not influenced by the plant's environment but is primarily or exclusively influenced by the internal genetic makeup of the plant (i.e.…”
Section: The Scientific (Ir)rationale Of the Dus Requirementmentioning
confidence: 99%