Values, self, and society : toward a humanist social psychology
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Values, self, and society : toward a humanist social psychology
Transaction Publishers, c1991
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 255-277) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In a tough opening statement, M. Brewster Smith outlines his own life course and contrasts it with the agenda of social psychology in the present professional moment. "Today's journals, textbooks, and conferences represent a vigorous but narrow scientific specialty in psychology, the practitioners of which are more closely focused on agendas that are primarily and often only intelligible within the subdiscipline than was the case when I formed my identity as a psychologist."
In contrast, Smith sees himself, and has long been seen by others, as a social psychologist in the tradition of Gordon Allport, Gardner and Lois Murphy, Kurt Lewin, and Muzafer Sherif. Smith's unique ability has been to contribute to the emergence of personality as a differentiated academic field and at the same time maintain strong interdisciplinary ties to a variety of fields ranging from sociology to philosophy. In recent years, such concerns have made the author a central figure in the development of Humanistic Psychology as a part of the American Psychological Association.
Because of these wide ranging concerns, the major statements of Brewster Smith have appeared in diverse places. Here, brought into a unified and uniform frame of reference, one has his work on values and selfhood, humanistic psychology and the social sciences, and humanism and social issues brought together for the first time. The picture is of a major thinker who is at home in the details of psychology and in the broad areas of public interest and social policy.
Brewster Smith discusses major issues in terms of the political processes involved in the public interest. These range from the issue of advocacy within social research to conceptualizing anew familiar issues within psychology. For the generalist interested in the broader meanings of social psychology to the specialist aiming to recapture the big issues with which the field was once identified, this is a must volume.
Table of Contents
- I: Values and Selfhood
- 1: Psychology and Values
- 2: Perspectives on Selfhood
- 3: Attitudes, Values, and Selfhood
- 4: The Metaphorical Basis of Selfhood
- II: Humanistic Psychology and Human Science
- 5: Toward a Secular Humanistic Psychology
- 6: Metapsychology, Politics, and Human Needs
- 7: Encounter Groups and Humanistic Psychology
- 8: Can There Be A Human Science?
- 9: Psychology and the Decline of Positivism: The Case for a Human Science
- 10: Beyond Aristotle and Galileo: Toward a Contextualized Psychology of Persons
- III: Humanism and Social Issues
- 11: Psychology in the Public Interest: What Have We Done? What Can We Do?
- 12: McCarthyism: A Personal Account
- 13: War, Peace, and Psychology
- 14: Value Dilemmas and Public Health
- 15: Hope and Despair: Keys to the Sociopsychodynamics of Youth
- Epilogue: Social Psychology as Human Science
by "Nielsen BookData"