Personality & Identity Psychology, Mind, Philosophy of, Cross-Cultural Psychology
The Conceptual Self in Context: Culture Experience Self Understanding
Ulric Neisser, David A. Jopling
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Overview
What is the self-concept, and how does it develop? Do people in different cultures have sharply different concepts of self? Can we believe what our informants tell us on this point? What is known about the self-concepts of depressives and schizophrenics? How does meditation affect the sense of self? Is there an inner "self of selves," as William James once suggested? These are among the most hotly debated questions in the social sciences today. In this book a prestigious group of psychologists, linguist, anthropologists, and philosophers addresses these questions and presents some surprising answers. This is the third volume organized around Ulric Neisser's cognitive theory of self-knowledge; it goes beyond The Perceived Self and The Remembering Self to deal with some of the oldest - as well as some of the newest - psychological and philosophical questions surrounding the self.Book Details
Published
June 1, 2010
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Pages
296
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780521153607