0 not interested in forming social groups or connections with others: --
The cat's independence has encouraged a widespread view that it is asocial.
The book depicts an insular, distrustful, asocial society.
It will foster the individualization of society and is thus ultimately an asocial phenomenon.
Third, we should acknowledge that working for understanding is essentially a social and not asocial matter.
In our culture, a person who displays the changes accompanying the gerotranscendence state of mind runs the risk of being judged as deviant, asocial or mentally disturbed.
While it would be an exaggeration to claim that governance as a perspective or approach is asocial, it is difficult to identify its view of society.
Schemes arose for anthropological surveys of social undesirables, and by the 1920s medical officers supported the compilation of biological indices of criminals and of other "asocial" persons.
High reactives raised by families that are extremely permissive of aggression and disobedience should be at higher risk for the development of impulsive or asocial behavior when frustrated.
However, these approaches all begin with a purely asocial theory of grammar and try to build in accounts of variation.
Similarly, asocial learning is critical to cultural change, but it is not the same thing as social transmission (or cultural selection).