Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Self-Organizing Complexity in Psychological Systems: Psychological Issues

Editat de Craig Piers, John P. Muller, Joseph Brent Contribuţii de Stanley R. Palombo, Walter J. Freeman, Jim Grigsby, Jeffrey Goldstein, E Virginia Demos, John Muller
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 apr 2007
This volume addresses itself to the ways in which the so-called 'new sciences of complexity' can deepen and broaden neurobiological and psychological theories of mind. Complexity theory has gained increasing attention over the past 20 years across diverse areas of inquiry, including mathematics, physics, economics, biology, and the social sciences. Complexity theory concerns itself with how nonlinear dynamical systems evolve and change over time and draws on research arising from chaos theory, self-organization, artificial intelligence and cellular automata, to name a few. This emerging discipline shows many points of convergence with psychological theory and practice, emphasizing that history is irreversible and discontinuous, that small early interventions can have large and unexpected later effects, that each life trajectory is unique yet patterned, that measurement error is not random and cannot be justifiably distributed equally across experimental conditions, that a system's collective and coordinated organization is emergent and often arises from simple components in interaction, and that change is more likely to emerge under conditions of optimal turbulence.
Citește tot Restrânge

Toate formatele și edițiile

Toate formatele și edițiile Preț Express
Paperback (1) 32781 lei  6-8 săpt.
  Bloomsbury Publishing – 18 apr 2007 32781 lei  6-8 săpt.
Hardback (1) 58323 lei  6-8 săpt.
  Bloomsbury Publishing – 18 apr 2007 58323 lei  6-8 săpt.

Din seria Psychological Issues

Preț: 32781 lei

Preț vechi: 45479 lei
-28%

Puncte Express: 492

Preț estimativ în valută:
5803 6740$ 5027£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 03-17 martie

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780765705266
ISBN-10: 0765705265
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 154 x 231 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Jason Aronson Inc
Seria Psychological Issues

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Complexity theory as the parent science of psychoanalysis
Chapter 3 A biological theory of brain function and its relevance to psychoanalysis
Chapter 4 Neurodynamics, state, agency and psychological functioning
Chapter 5 Emergence: When a difference in degree becomes a difference in kind
Chapter 6 Emergence and psychological morphogenesis
Chapter 7 The dynamics of development
Chapter 8 The language of complexity theory

Recenzii

The scholars in this volume succeed in explaining a wide range of psychological and treatment phenomena with only a small number of basic and fascinating principles. Dichotomies such as "nature versus nurture" and "free will versus determinism" have become false dichotomies now that the processes of emergence are better understood.
Non-linear systems theorists have been attempting to describe biological evolution and have themselves gone through several generations of evolution. Theoreticians in this genre have pursued the elusive goal of making sense out of natural phenomena so complex that they defy linear description or explanation. This volume of papers gives a wide ranging, comprehensive and vastly interesting overview of the thinking of the present generation. The authors are leaders in the field, and they tackle the philosophical, mathematical, developmental, biological and psychological aspects of complex systems. This book will be a necessary text for anyone seriously interested in this domain.
This collection of essays, drawing on powerful new readings of complexity theory, offers fascinating and useful innovations in psychoanalytic and psychological thinking. In considering the intricacy of the psychotherapy dyad, the dynamics of character, the potential for change and stability, and the problematic of individual development, we see the power of an elegant and nuanced theory which privileges pattern and unpredictable emergence. The goals of this book are revolutionary, yet couched in careful and measured terms. We are being introduced to a new parent discipline. The authors of these essays consider complexity theory to be the 21st-century replacement for thermodynamics and for information theory as the guiding instrument of theory building.Emanating from the new perspective of nonlinear dynamic systems, the authors find wondrous possibilities in brain science, in psychology, in personality theory, in philosophy and semiotics. It is my hope that readers will do the heavy lifting this bookrequires to find revealed a model of human behavior that integrates body and mind, psyche and culture, person and interpersonal field, personal subjectivity and environment. Finally, this book illuminates a theoretical apparatus sufficient to the complex
I have seen little other writing that relates the field of complexity, chaos, and nonlinear dynamics to psychology; for that reason alone, Self-Organizing Complexity in Psychological Systems deserves attention....this book begs for "study groups" who will devote their own intersubjective discussion to fleshing out this rich material.
The world's inability to deal effectively with the plethora of potentially catastrophic problems facing it such as global warming, environmental collapse, famine, drought, maldistribution of wealth, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, religious fundamentalism, all stems from the deeply non-rational nature of the human psyche. Psychoanalysis has been the only discipline that has attempted a holistic theory of the mind that takes into account its non-rational nature. Unfortunately, psychoanalysis was founded upon a misapplication of reductionist physical science and so failed to live up to its full potential. The contributors to this volume seek to provide a complete re-envisioning of psychoanalysis based upon the new sciences of complexity, grounding the field in the ideas of emergence, agency, morphogenesis and giving us a psychoanalysis for the twenty-first century.