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Psychology of Personhood: Philosophical, Historical, Social-Developmental, and Narrative Perspectives

Bickhard, Mark H.(Edited by)Martin, Jack(Edited by)
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What is a person? Surprisingly little attention is given to this question in psychology.

For much of the past century, psychology has tended to focus on the systematic study of processes rather than on the persons who enact and embody them.

In contrast to the reductionist picture of much mainstream theorising, which construes persons as their mental lives, behaviours or neurophysiological particulars, The Psychology of Personhood presents persons as irreducibly embodied and socially situated beings.

Placing the study of persons at the centre of psychology, this book presents novel insights on the typical, everyday actions and experiences of persons in relation to each other and to the broader society and culture.

Leading scholars from diverse academic disciplines paint an integrative portrait of the psychological person within evolutionary, historical, cultural, developmental and everyday contexts.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1139610430 / 9781139610438
eBook (EPUB)
155.2
29/11/2012
English
238 pages
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