|
Also Recommended
|
|
|
John M. Doris, The Moral Psychology Research Group
£53.00
|
|
|
|
|
Tim Bayne
£36.00
|
|
|
|
|
Brian McLaughlin, Ansgar Beckermann...
£105.00
|
|
|
|
|
The Oxford Handbook of the Self
Edited by Shaun Gallagher
768 pages
|
246x171mm
978-0-19-954801-9
|
Hardback
|
10 February 2011
|
|
|
|
|
- The state-of-the-art book on the subject
- A fast-growing area of philosophy connecting with other disciplines
- Features an excellent line-up of contributors
- Valuable for anyone working on philosophy, psychology, psychopathology, and neuroscience
Research on the topic of self has increased significantly in recent years across a number of disciplines, including philosophy, psychology, psychopathology, and neuroscience. The Oxford Handbook of the Self is an interdisciplinary collection of essays that address questions in all of these areas. In philosophy and some areas of cognitive science, the emphasis on embodied cognition has fostered a renewed interest in rethinking personal identity, mind-body dualism, and overly Cartesian conceptions of self. Poststructuralist deconstructions of traditional metaphysical conceptions of subjectivity have led to debates about whether there are any grounds (moral if not metaphysical) for reconstructing the notion of self. Questions about whether selves actually
exist or have an illusory status have been raised from perspectives as diverse as neuroscience, Buddhism, and narrative theory. With respect to self-agency, similar questions arise in experimental psychology. In addition, advances in developmental psychology have pushed to the forefront questions about the ontogenetic origin of self-experience, while studies of psychopathology suggest that concepts like self and agency are central to explaining important aspects of pathological experience. These and other issues motivate questions about how we understand, not only "the self", but also how we understand ourselves in social and cultural contexts.Readership: Students and scholars of philosophy and psychology, also
religion and literary studies.
|
|
|
Edited by Shaun Gallagher, University of Central Florida Shaun Gallagher is Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Sciences, and Senior Researcher at the Institute of Simulation and Training, at the University of Central Florida (USA); he has secondary research appointments at the University of Hertfordshire and the University of Copenhagen. He has been Visiting Scientist at the Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, and Visiting Professor at the University of Copenhagen, the Centre de Recherche en Epistémelogie Appliquée (CREA), Paris, and the Ecole Normale Supériure, Lyon. Contributors:
James R. Anderson, University of Stirling John Barresi, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada José Bermúdez, University of Stirling John Campbell, University of California, Berkeley Quassim Cassam, Warwick University Marcia Cavell, University of California, Berkeley Lorraine Code, York University, Toronto Shaun Gallagher, University of Central Florida Gordon G. Gallup, Jr., University at Albany Kenneth Gergen, Swarthmore College Aaron Henry Hubert Hermans, Catholic University of Nijmegen Peter Hobson, University College London Len Lawlor, Penn State University Dorothée Legrand, Center for Research in Applied
Epistemology, Paris Raymond Martin, Union College, New York Alfred Mele, Florida State University Richard Menary, University of Wollongong Thomas Metzinger, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz Elisabeth Pacherie, Institut Jean Nicod, CNRS Josef Parnas, University of Copenhagen Derek Parfit, University of Oxford John Perry, Stanford University Steven M. Platek, Georgia Gwinnett College Elspeth Probyn, University of South Australia Jennifer Radden, University of Massachusetts at Boston Philippe Rochat, Emory University Louis Sass, Rutgers University Marya Schechtman, University of Illinois at Chicago David
Shoemaker, Bowling Green State University Sydney Shoemaker, Cornell University Galen Strawson, University of Reading Evan Thompson, University of Toronto Manos Tsakiris, Royal Holloway University of London Kai Vogeley, Uniklinik Koln Mark Siderits, Illinois State University Dan Zahavi, University of Copenhagen
|
|
|
"It is remarkable that Shaun Gallagher has managed to dish up such a satisfying work in The Oxford Handbook of the Self ... [He] has assembled an outstanding array of articles to understand how contemporary research programs in diverse fields converge on the self to address the perennial problem of the nature of our being. The Oxford Handbook of the Self is an excellent, interdisciplinary resource for teaching and research." - John P. Lizza, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
|
|
|
Shaun Gallagher: Introduction: A diversity of selves
1. Self: Beginnings and basics
1: John Barresi and Raymond Martin: History as Prologue: Western Theories of the Self
2: Philippe Rochat: What is it like to be a newborn?
3: Gordon G. Gallup, Jr., James R. Anderson, and Steven M. Platek: Self-recognition
4: Kai Vogeley and Shaun Gallagher: Self in the brain
2. Bodily selves
5: Quassim Cassam: The embodied self
6: José Bermúdez: Body awareness and self-consciousness
7: Manos Tsakiris: The sense of body ownership
8: Dorothée Legrand: Phenomenological dimensions of bodily self-consciousness
9: Aaron Henry and Evan Thompson: Witnessing from Here: Self-Awareness from a Bodily versus Embodied Perspective
3. Phenomenology and metaphysics of self
10: Galen Strawson: The minimal subject
11: Thomas Metzinger: The no-self alternative
12: Mark Siderits: Buddhist Non-Self: The No-Owner's Manual
13: Dan Zahavi: Unity of consciousness and the problem of self
4. Personal identity, narrative identity, and self-knowledge
14: John Campbell: Personal identity
15: Sydney Shoemaker: On what we are
16: John Perry: On knowing your self
17: Marya Schechtman: The narrative self
5. Action and the moral dimensions of self
18: Derek Parfit: The unimportance of identity
19: Elisabeth Pacherie: Self-agency
20: Alfred Mele: Self-control in action
21: David Shoemaker: Moral responsibility and the self
6. Self pathologies
22: Josef Parnas and Louis Sass: The structure of self-consciousness in schizophrenia
23: Jennifer Radden: Multiple selves
24: Peter Hobson: Autism and the self
25: Marcia Cavell: The self: Growth, integrity, and coming apart
7. The self in diverse contexts
26: Richard Menary: Our Glassy Essence: the Fallible Self in Pragmatist Thought
27: Kenneth Gergen: The social construction of self
28: Hubert Hermans: The Dialogical Self: A Process of Positioning in Space and Time
29: Elspeth Probyn: Glass Selves: Emotions, subjectivity, and the research process
30: Leonard Lawlor: The Postmodern Self: An Essay on Anachronism and Powerlessness
31: Lorraine Code: Self, subjectivity, and the instituted social imaginary
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
|
|