Virtual selves, real persons : a dialogue across disciplines
著者
書誌事項
Virtual selves, real persons : a dialogue across disciplines
Cambridge University Press, 2009
- : hbk
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内容説明・目次
内容説明
How do we know and understand who we really are as human beings? The concept of 'the self' is central to many strands of psychology and philosophy. This book tackles the problem of how to define persons and selves and discusses the ways in which different disciplines, such as biology, sociology and philosophy, have dealt with this topic. Richard S. Hallam examines the notion that the idea of the self as some sort of entity is a human construction and, in effect, a virtual reality. At the same time, this virtual self is intimately related to the reality of ourselves as biological organisms. Aiming to integrate a constructionist understanding of self with the universalizing assumptions that are needed in natural science approaches, this text is unique in its attempt to create a dialogue across academic disciplines, while retaining a consistent perspective on the problem of relating nature to culture.
目次
- Acknowledgements
- Part I. A constructionist framework for person and self: 1. The main themes: virtual selves, mind-body dualism and natural science
- 2. Conceptualising self
- 3. Generic persons and selves
- 4. Multiplicity within singularity
- 5. Sense-of-self: the first person perspective
- 6. Self in historical explanation
- 7. Self as historically positioned and narrated
- Part II. Person and Self in Science: 8. Philosophy's legacy to a science of self
- 9. Self in mind and brain
- 10. Self, person as agent and natural causation
- 11. Self in child development
- 12. Self in human evolution
- 13. Loose ends and split hairs
- Bibliography
- Index.
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