The Perceived Images of the State and Human Being and Their Relationship with the Political cultural types

Authors

  • Jassim Mohammad Idi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47831/mjse.v20i6.714

Keywords:

The concept of man, the concept of the state, political culture, semantic differentiation

Abstract

The current study aims at exploring the representation of human being and state (by using the style of linguistic psychological theory) and the relationship of this representation with the patterns of political culture (by using the style of the theory of culture) in the Iraqi society. However, the objectives of the study are: (1) exploring the total and detailed evaluation of the Iraqi human being, the Iraqi state, and the human being and state, (2) knowing the differences in total and detailed evaluation of the Iraqi human being, the Iraqi state, and the human being and state, (3) exploring the factorial construction of the concepts of the Iraqi human being, the Iraqi state, and the human being and state, (4) knowing the political culture: the dictatorial, fatidical, individualism and equalitarian, and (5) exploring the relationship between the political concepts and cultures. Consequently, the researcher has constructed four scales - by using the statistical distinctiveness of the four concepts, and adopted the scale of (Jabur, 2014)foor the political culture. After administering the scales on a sample that consists of (50) male and female students, the results: the diversity of looking at the Iraqi human being with superiority of the positive evaluation, whereas there is a high negativity in the evaluation of Iraqi state and high positivity in evaluating the human being and state, the researcher has put forward a number of conclusons, recommendation and suggestion.

Published

2019-12-31

How to Cite

Mohammad Idi ج. . (2019). The Perceived Images of the State and Human Being and Their Relationship with the Political cultural types. Mustansiriyah Journal for Sciences and Education, 20(6), 327–348. https://doi.org/10.47831/mjse.v20i6.714

Issue

Section

Research Article