Philosophy of Psychology Books - Page 13

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The Soul of Beauty: A Psychological Investigation of Appearance

Ronald Schenk

The Soul of Beauty: A Psychological Investigation of Appearance Ronald Schenk Amazon Price: $34.50
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By: Bucknell University Press
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Editorial Review:

The problem addressed in this work is the split in modern consciousness between the world of perception, appearance, matter, and object on the one hand, and the world of action, meaning, spirit, and subject on the other. This work presents this dualism as an aesthetic problem and attempts to bridge the split by revealing beauty as a unifying principle.

The Reluctant Alliance: Behaviorism and Humanism

Bobby Newman

The Reluctant Alliance: Behaviorism and Humanism Bobby Newman Amazon Price: $20.95
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By: Prometheus Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Brilliant 5 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

Irony: People are conditioned to reject conditioning. Our culture continues to criticize behavioral psychology because the conclusions are the opposite of what people learn to accept without question. Thank you Bobby Newman for providing a book that will expose people to the importance of this technology in a user friendly way. Behavioral technology and understanding human behavior is needed to not only improve the world and provide hope for the human race, but to also give people a true scientific perspective and understanding of how we fit in with the evolutionary process. We aren't magical autonomous freaks. We are beautiful animals that live in a world that selects our genetics as well as our behavior. Our society is starting to recognize the men of science, but their ignorance is obvious and sad. To understand the evolutionary chain you must understand human behavior and they just have no clue. Human behavior is based on consequences, selected for just like genetic material. Just like evolution the process isn't always obvious and can go against common sense, but the reality is obvious to anyone that gains understanding. Stop reading criticisms that show complete misunderstandings of behaviorism and read About Behaviorism by B.F. Skinner and then read this book. Hopefully one day the ignorance of people like Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett, Steven Pinker, Christopher Hitchens, etc... won't be reinforced and the Bobby Newman's of this world that actually exhibit intelligent, compassionate, caring behavior will. Stop reading the criticisms. Read the sources. Great book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Editorial Review:

Humanistic psychology and behaviour analysis have long been viewed as staunch opponents in the practice of psychology. Newman's careful research into the theories, positions, and approaches of both camps dispels the myths of behaviourists as cold "manipulators" and of humanistic psychologists as weak-willed "armchair philosophers". After examining both systems, he outlines their shared philosophical and historical roots. Newman explores such questions as: How should psychotherapy be conducted? How is moral behaviour created and maintained? Is behaviourism unethical? and What forms of education are most effective at imparting information and improving self-concepts?

Analyzing Love (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy)

Robert Brown

Analyzing Love (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy) Robert Brown Amazon Price: $85.00
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By: Cambridge University Press
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Editorial Review:

Analyzing Love is concerned with four basic and neglected problems concerning love. The first is identifying its relevant features: distinguishing it from liking and benevolence and from sexual desire; describing the objects that can be loved and the judgments and aims required by love. The second question is how we recognize the presence of love and what grounds we may have for thinking it present in any particular case. The third is that of relating it to other emotions such as anger and fear, and, more generally, deciding where love stands in the contrast between emotions and attitudes. Finally, the book examines how we justify our loves: can we have, and do we need, reasons for loving? What types of judgment are appropriate to love? Can we criticize a lover for his or her choices?

Adjudicative Competence: The MacArthur Studies (Perspectives in Law & Psychology)

Norman G. Poythress Jr., Richard J. Bonnie, John Monahan, Randy Otto, Steven K. Hoge

Adjudicative Competence: The MacArthur Studies (Perspectives in Law & Psychology) Norman G. Poythress Jr., Richard J. Bonnie, John Monahan, Randy Otto, Steven K. Hoge List Price: $74.95
By: Springer
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Editorial Review:

Adjudicative competence remains an important topic of research and practice in psychology and law. In the five sections of Adjudicative Competence: The MacArthur Studies, the authors present not only a summary of the research of the MacArthur studies on competence but also an examination of the underlying theoretical work of Professor Richard Bonnie. It is the first publication to encapsulate the scope and significance of both the studies themselves and Bonnie's contributions. There is no other source available that addresses this range of topics. Given its breadth and scope, this book will be a "must have" for forensic mental health professionals, an important volume for lawyers, and a vital academic reference work.

The Body in Mind: Understanding Cognitive Processes (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy)

Mark Rowlands

The Body in Mind: Understanding Cognitive Processes (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy) Mark Rowlands Amazon Price: $130.00
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Editorial Review:

In this book, Mark Rowlands challenges the Cartesian view of the mind as a self-contained monadic entity, and offers in its place a radical externalist or environmentalist model of cognitive processes. Drawing on both evolutionary theory and a detailed examination of the processes involved in perception, memory, thought and language use, Rowlands argues that cognition is, in part, a process whereby creatures manipulate and exploit relevant objects in their environment. This innovative book provides a foundation for an unorthodox but increasingly popular view of the nature of cognition.

The Planets Within (Studies in Jungian thought)

Thomas Moore

The Planets Within (Studies in Jungian thought) Thomas Moore List Price: $32.50
By: Bucknell Univ Pr
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The Philosophy of Psychology

The Philosophy of Psychology List Price: $135.00
By: Sage Publications Ltd
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Editorial Review:

This essential book provides a comprehensive explanation of the key topics and debates arising in the philosophy of psychology. In editors William O'Donohue and Richard Kitchener's thoughtful examination, philosophy and psychology converge on several themes of great importance such as the foundations of knowledge, the nature of science, rationality, behaviorism, cognitive science, folk psychology, neuropsychology, psychoanalysis, professionalism, and research ethics. The Philosophy of Psychology also provides an in-depth discussion of ethics in counseling and psychiatry while exploring the diverse topics listed above. The internationally renowned group of contributors to this volume both stimulating and informative. The Philosophy of Psychology will be invaluable for students and academics in theories and systems in psychology, cognitive psychology, cognitive science, philosophy of the social sciences, philosophy of the mind, and related courses.

German Essays on Psychology (The German Library, V. 62)

German Essays on Psychology (The German Library, V. 62) Amazon Price: $29.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

a fantastic volume 5 out of 5 stars.
5 of 5 people found this review helpful.

This volume is of essence for anyone interested in psychology, philosophy, and the innumerable intersections, cross-cuttings, and knots that make these two fields stiffly inseparable. Wolfgang Schirmacher's selections are fantastic, and his introduction provides an inspiring and thought-provoking context in which to read the essays that follow. You won't find such a collection anywhere else! If we are to understand the historical trends that have influenced the way in which we think about psychology, we must understand the thinkers in this volume.
The book is divided into four sections. In the first, "Psychology as Philosophy," we encounter Wilhelm Dilthey, Edmund Husserl, Eduard Spranger, and Wilhelm Wundt, each trying to define and revise the role of psychology within the sciences and the humanities. The second section, "Psychoanalysis and its Critics," which includes essays by Alfred Adler, Anna Freud, Erich Fromm, Karen Horney, Carl Jung, and Wilhelm Reich, will be more familiar to students whose encounter with philosophical psychology has been primarily founded in psychoanalytic theory. For students of psychology, many of the ideas articulated by these thinkers have become so prevalent in the milieu that a rereading proves itself essential. An important addition to this section is the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, whose theories have come under attack in recent years by scholars influenced by postmodernism, who have pegged Jungian psychology with the four-letter-word `essentialism.' A reexamination of these theories may prove them to be less determinate than at first glance. The third section of the volume is comprised of essays by Gestalt psychologists Chistian von Ehrenfels, Kurt Koffka, Wolfgang Köhler, Kurt Lewin, and Max Wertheimer. These essays, along with the writings of Wundt, have been, in the realm of experimental psychology, arguably the most influential of those included in this volume.
Finally, the last section of the volume, "Iconoclasts in Psychology," contains essays from a number of authors (Ludwig Binswanger, Karl Jaspers, Alexander Mitscherlich, Wilhelm Salber, and Erwin Straus) whose revolutionary theories have influenced, noticeably or not, psychologies more familiar to mainstream academics. Binswanger's notion that "the neurotic, too," can be brought back "down to earth" from Extravagance with the aid of a psychotherapist is a subtle reversal of terms, a theory perhaps more acceptable to clinicians who find Deleuze and Guattari (who have suggested that it is the neurotic, rather than the psychotic, who is incurable) abstruse. Salber's notion of a "self-therapy of reality" is an incisive reminder that psychology's basic questions have not yet been satisfactorily answered. Lastly, Straus's exposition "On Being Awake," provides a reevaluation of the Cartesian notion of dreams. Straus's argument becomes uncannily reminiscent of the aforementioned debates concerning methodology.
As Karl Jaspers points out, if the relation of empirical psychological pursuits and their philosophical counterparts is not conscious, this will lead to a confusion of the two spheres. It is no secret that the rational positivist position of experimental psychology has, especially in recent years, a problematic relationship to philosophical logic; the very philosophies professed to be inadequate or too "vague" for scientific pursuits are nevertheless incorporated into empirical endeavors, as if afterthoughts. The new "postmodern" psychotherapies (e.g., narrative therapy), for example, suddenly gained interest at the same time that philosophers began to contemplate what was (is) to happen as the postmodern era wanes. However, just because psychologists may be oblivious to society's general philosophical sentiments doesn't mean that patients are as well, and without the philosophical insights that are put through the (slower) laboratorial machinery, psychotherapists might remain waiting for empirical guidance that emerges years too late. The relevance of the articles presented in this volume is not only an issue of theoretical and statistical accuracy, but also a problem of practical integrity if we are not, as Schirmacher puts it, to treat humans as "better-suited rats."

Editorial Review:

Volume 62 of this ground-breaking 100 volume collection is organized into four sections: Psychology as Philosophy, Psychoanalysis and Its Critics, Research in Gestalt Psychology, and The Iconoclasts.

A showcase of German-psychological thinkers and thought through the 20th century, this volume includes several new translations of articles by pyschologists whose work is rarely available in English.

The Psychology of Rigorous Humanism

Joseph F. Rychlak

The Psychology of Rigorous Humanism Joseph F. Rychlak List Price: $50.00
By: New York University Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Dense but Incredibly Enlightening 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 2 people found this review helpful.

While this book is quite dense (which is, generally, Rychlak's writing style), it provides a refreshing look at paradigmatic issues in psychology. As relevant today as it was when written, this book presents the perspective that psychology requires a different perspective for understanding psychological phenomena. The paradigmatic tendency is to take an extraspective, outside-looking-in perspective on humans and an efficient causal, linear determinstic perspective on explanation. Alternatively, Rychlak argues for a intraspective, inside-looking-out perspective on humans and a final causal (purposive/telic) perspective on explanation. Rychlak argues that psychology has done a fantastically appaling job at confounding theory and method. Still, if there is one gross fault I see with this book, it is that Rychlak does exactly what he accuses Freud of: he appears to not take his perspective far enough, arguing for what amounts to a change in ontology (that, is study of being) but accepting the paradigmatic epistemology (method of science), which maintains the status quo that he spends so much time arguing against. I would definitely recommend this book (with the proviso provided).

Editorial Review:

In this second edition, Joseph Rychlak has retained his analysis of the philosophical antecedents of psychology and, at the same time, has considerably revised more complicated material illustration "rigorous humanism" to make the book more accessible for students. Rychlak here offers an analysis of the philosophical traditions underlying the social sciences and shows how functionalism came to dominate the modern science of psychology in America.

Objectivity, Simulation and the Unity of Consciousness: Current Issues in the Philosophy of Mind (Proceedings of the British Academy)

Objectivity, Simulation and the Unity of Consciousness: Current Issues in the Philosophy of Mind (Proceedings of the British Academy) List Price: $24.00
By: Oxford University Press, USA
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Editorial Review:

What is it to be capable of thoughts about an objective world? What is involved in the unity of consciousness? How is the ability to attribute attitudes to other persons to be understood? The three symposia in this volume develop new approaches to these central questions in the philosophy of mind. The contributors include leading philosophers of the middle and younger generation working in Britain. All the issues discussed have an interdisciplinary dimension, and each symposium contains a contrbution from a noted psychologist working in the same field. The volume will be of interest not only to philosophers of mind, but also to those concerned with metaphysics, epistemology, developmental pscychology, animal psychology, and the nature of consciousness.

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