Argues that the key to a healthy body lies in a healthy attitude toward food and exercise, utilizing proven psychological strategies and effective exercises to help readers transform negative behaviors into healthy eating and exercise habits.
Thinking thinking: Practicing radical reflection
✍ Scribed by Donata Schoeller (Hrsg.); Vera Saller (Hrsg.)
- Publisher
- Karl Alber
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 241
- Series
- Schriftenreihe der DGAP; 5
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Table of Contents
Contents
Donata Schoeller, Vera Saller: Introduction
Radical Reflectivity
Challenges
Introducing the authors
References
Claire Petitmengin: The scientist’s body at the source of meaning
1. Forgetting the experience of the scientist
2. Research method
3. The corporal anchoring of ideation
3.1 The propitious inner disposition
3.2 The microgenesis of the idea
4. The bodily dimension of expression
Coming into contact
Confrontation with the felt meaning
Transformation of the felt meaning
5. Structural characteristics of the felt dimension
Specificity
Transmodality
Rhythmic and gestural character
Vitality dynamics
6. Lines of research
Re-enchanting school
»Abstract« thought
Conclusion
References
Eugene Gendlin: A changed ground for precise cognition
I. Two kinds of precision
I-1) The »background« is implicit in the figure
I-2) Accessing the implicit: We can always easily say a lot from the implicit
I-3) A direct referent (DR, also called a »felt sense«)
I-4) Readiness to speak; implying-occurring
I-5) Occurring into implying
I-6) Implying is body-environment interaction
I-7) We can move on from where philosophy is currently stopped
I-8) The apparent »breaks« in the logic of science are actually its reciprocity with the implicit
II. Coming and forming in the coming
II-1) Two questions: the coming and the taking account
II-2) The space of behavior possibilities
II-3) We perceive objects in the implicit space of behavior possibilities
II-4) Immediate formation is forming-into
III. Systematic use of the »background«
III-1) Logic consists of external relations:
III-2) Pitfalls of theory in the unit model
III-3) Correcting the current theory. Three examples
a) Behavior is more than motion
b) Behavior formation unites the intakes from the sense organs
c) Agency and consciousness are generated in the course of behavior formation
III-4) The practice of thinking
III-5) New powers for logical analysis
a) We can differentiate a strand of meaning
b) Differentiating ordinary language
c) New concepts
d) Reversal; the specific can redefine the generality
e) A new set of units
f) Using many models and systems
g) Using an actual sample of what we want to formulate
h) Operational definitions
i) Choosing among research instruments
j) Protection against mistakes
References
Susan A. J. Stuart: Enkinaesthesia and Reid’s natural kind of magic
Introduction
Reid’s ›Natural Language‹
Enkinaesthesia and Experiential Spilling Over
Conclusion
References
Donata Schoeller: Somatic – Semantic – Shifting: Articulating Embodied Cultures
1. Language as Process
2. Close Talking
3. Responsive Process
4. Felt Sense and Somatic Marker
References
Terrence W. Deacon: The emergent process of thinking as reflected in language processing
Introduction
Brain development parallels
Language as a differentiation process
»Languaging« in the brain
Language as semiosis
Counter-current information processing
Implications and conclusions
References
Vincent Colapietro: A Peircean Account of First-Person »Authority«: The Radical Implications of Thoroughgoing Fallibilism
References
Vera Saller: The detective metaphor in abduction studies and psychoanalysis – and what it teaches us about the process of thought
What is abduction?
New Ideas
Peirce as detective
Guesses
Abduction goes along with an emotion
Imagination
Freud as a detective
Holmes’, Peirce’s and Freud’s musings
Abduction, Perception, Emotion
Conclusions
References
Steven C. Hayes: Human Language and Subjective Experience: The symbolically extended »us« as a basis of human consciousness
Functional Contextualism
The Tribal Primate
The Cooperative Core of Symbolic Meaning
The Cognitive Extension of Perspective-Taking and Sense of Self
Applying this Analysis
Conclusion
References
Patrizia Giampieri-Deutsch: Towards living subjective experience
»Third-person« sciences such as neurobiology and cognitive science
Nonreductive philosophy of mind
Emergence theories
Downward causation
The »hard« and »easy« problems of consciousness
The »explanatory gap«
Buddhist tradition and psychoanalysis have practices and techniques
Buddhist practices and techniques
Problems of mutual understanding could possibly arise
Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalytic technique
Integrating »first-« and »third-person« methodologies
References
Index of Authors
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