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This book explores the meaning and import of neurophenomenology and the philosophy of enactive or embodied cognition for psychology. It introduces the psychologist to an experiential, non-reductive, holistic, theoretical, and practical framework that integrates the approaches of natural and human science to consciousness. In integrating phenomenology with cognitive science, neurophenomenology provides a bridge between the natural and human sciences that opens an interdisciplinary dialogue on the nature of awareness, the ontological primacy of experience, the perception of the observer, and the mind-brain relationship, which will shape the future of psychological theory, research, and practice.
Explores the meaning and import of neurophenomenology Introduces the psychologist to a theoretical and practical framework Integrates the approaches of natural and human science to consciousness Emphasizes a non-reductionistic, holistic approach Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Auteur
Susan Gordon, Ph.D., Core Adjunct Professor, Department of Psychology, National University, La Jolla, CA Research Director, Southbury Clinic for Traditional Medicines, Southbury, CT, invited Postdoctoral Fellowships: L'Institut des Systèmes Complexes Paris Île-de-France (ISC-PIF); Centrede Recherche en Epistémologie Appliquée (CREA) (École Polytechnique), Research Affiliate, Harvard College Library and Bibliothèque François Mitterrand.
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Praise for Neurophenomenology and Its Applications to Psychology:* *
Forward edge of contemporary efforts to integrate natural and human science approaches to consciousness. All chapters are evenly and clearly written.
Constance T. Fischer, Ph.D., ABPP, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA
A much welcome, if not over-due, translation of neurophenomenological principleswhich have previously remained limited to philosophical discourseto some of the central concerns of psychologists.
Larry Davidson, Ph.D., Yale University, New Haven, CT
A heady mix of articles that elucidates the 'hard problem' of mind/brain interrelations and travels some distance in closing the circle of psychology on neuroscience.
Edward Mendelowitz, Ph.D., Saybrook University, San Francisco, CA
This volume accomplishes the elegant and timely synthesis of phenomenology, transpersonal and humanistic-somatic psychologies as they applyto contemporary neuroscience. Beginners and advanced scholars will benefit greatly.
Aaron L. Mishara, Ph.D., Psy.D., Sofia University, Palo Alto, CA
The nature of consciousness and the self, the mind's role in informing the brain, the experience of personal growth: all are ideas mainly associated with philosophy rather than hard science. In response, Neurophenomenology and Its Applications to Psychology translates integrative concepts in neurophenomenology into terms that are clearest and most useful to students and practitioners across psychological disciplines. Removing conceptual barriers that have traditionally kept cognitive and emotional phenomena relegated to separate areas of the brain, these groundbreaking models present existential-phenomenological and humanistic-transpersonal perspectives in neuroscience context for real-world usefulness. The book demonstrates the potential of the field to transform psychology at both experimental and practical levels as it:
Contenu
Enactive Cognition and the Neurophenomenology of Emotion.- Neurophenomenological Praxis: Its Applications to Leaning and Pedagogy.- Cognitive Phenomenology in the Study of Tibetan Meditation: Phenomenological Descriptions vs. Meditation Styles.- Déjà Vu: William James on "The Brain and the Mind,"1878.- Psychoneurointracrinology: The Embodied Self.