However, there arise occasions in which individuals and groups do seek for a basis of agreement and where interrelations are of such a nature that fundamental differences in judgments of the good become sources of
dangerous social disorder.
Not exact matches
No study has shown, however, that the goals for separateness and independence (or happiness, for that matter) are obtained in the individual by, among other things, separate sleeping arrangements for parents and children, nor do any studies demonstrate negative consequences for children or parents who choose to cosleep for ideological or emotional purposes, except when cosleeping is part of a larger psychologically
disordered set of family relationships or when cosleeping occurs under
dangerous social or physical circumstances.
One study done in 2015 by Pam Ramsden, who studies psychological resiliency at the University of Bradford in England, found that 22 percent of subjects experienced some symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (such as jitteriness or the belief that the world is extremely
dangerous) after viewing violent news images on
social media — and symptoms worsened with increased exposure.
Caregivers of children with disinhibited
social engagement
disorder often experience anxiety and fear that the child's behavior will put him or her in a
dangerous situation by behaving too comfortably with strangers.