Social Inhibition
Social inhibition is a conscious or unconscious constraint or curtailment of objectionable behavior in a social setting. Inhibitions can serve as necessary functions, reducing or preventing antisocial impulses from being acted upon.
Inhibitions vary greatly among people, and, maybe linked to confidence. An extreme lack of inhibition may be antisocial and symptomatic of mental disorder. On the other hand, high inhibition can create serious personal problems, including the inability to express emotion.
The consumption of alcohol can reduce inhibition. Low levels of blood alcohol can reduce social inhibition. In an experiment of alcohol, without alcohol, people simply need alcohol, as an excuse to behave, as they would not, otherwise.
Confidence is being certain a prediction is correct or a course of action is best. Arrogance is having unmerited confidence, believing something or someone is capable or correct when they are not. Confidence can be a self-fulfilling prophesy, those without it might fail or not try because they lack it, those with it may succeed, because they have it, rather than because of an innate ability.
Frederick Nietzche employs the idea of 'amor fati', not to be understood as a fixed and alterable of events on a necessary outcome. It is not a promise and eventual achievement, extending from a guaranteed outcome, of a final state, for oneself, humanity, at large, or the world, and after the accomplishment, eventually, the playing out of result- comes to an end.
Amor Fati concerns the insight that involves us in a knowledge, amounting to wisdom, of an excess leaving he who knows it only as a 'yes-sayer'.
Wikipedia
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