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Unconscious Knowing and Other Essays in Psycho-Philosophical Analysis [Minkštas viršelis]

(Associate Professor in Psychiatry, University of Michigan, USA)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 194 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x157x12 mm, weight: 310 g, 2 black and white illustrations
  • Serija: International Perspectives in Philosophy & Psychiatry
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Jun-2010
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199581479
  • ISBN-13: 9780199581474
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 194 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x157x12 mm, weight: 310 g, 2 black and white illustrations
  • Serija: International Perspectives in Philosophy & Psychiatry
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Jun-2010
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199581479
  • ISBN-13: 9780199581474
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
In Unconscious knowing and other essays in psycho-philosophical analysis. Linda A.W. Brakel tackles a range of fascinating and puzzling phenomena that lie at the border between psychoanalysis and philosophy of mind and action. These include unconscious knowing. vagueness, agency, the placebo effect, and even explanation itself. Unique in its use of tools and concepts from both philosophy and psychoanalysis, the book demonstrates how this interdisciplinary approach can provide unique solutions to some impenetrable problems.

Following the introduction, chapter two on `unconscious knowing' puts forward a radical epistemological view of knowledge and belief, providing evidence from psychoanalytic data and empirical research, including the subliminal method. Chapter three considers philosophical accounts of vagueness in relation to a-rational mentation, finding surprising similarities. Chapter four then develops an original account of agency whilst discovering that a central problem for analysands is quite analogous to an important philosophical problem: namely, when I am concerned with my own survival, just what is the nature of the `me' of concern? In chapter five the mysterious placebo effect is made more understandable in terms of the basic psychoanalytic concepts that are shown to underlie it, and finally chapter six concludes the book with an examination of explanations in general, including those in the preceding chapters.

This is a book that will be of great interest to those within both psychoanalysis and philosophy of mind and action, offering up some compelling explanations for some puzzling phenomena.

In Unconscious Knowing and Other Essays in Psycho-philosophical Analysis, Linda Brakel tackles a range of fascinating and puzzling phenomena that lie at the border between psychoanalysis and philosophy of mind. These include - unconscious knowing, vagueness, agency, the placebo effect, and even explanation itself. Unique in its use of tools and concepts from both philosophy and psychoanalysis, the book demonstrates how this interdisciplinary approach can provide some unique solutions to some impenetrable problems.

Following the introduction, chapter two on 'unconscious knowing' puts forward a radical epistemological view of knowledge and belief, providing evidence from psychoanalytic data and empirical research, using the subliminal method. Chapter three considers philosophical accounts of vagueness in relation to a-rational mentation, finding surprising similarities. In Chapter four, an original account of agency is developed whilst discovering that a central problem for analysands is quite analogous to an important philosophical problem: namely, when I am concerned with my own survival, just what is the nature of the 'me' of concern? In Chapter five the mysterious placebo effect is made more understandable in terms of the basic psychoanalytic concepts that are shown to underlie it.
Finally, chapter six concludes the book with an examination of explanations in general, including those in the proceeding chapters.

This book will be of great interest to those within both psychoanalysis and philosophy of mind, offering up some compelling explanations for some puzzling phenomena.
Part I Introduction
1 Introduction
3(6)
References
6(3)
Part II Unconscious knowing: Epistemology, philosophy of mind
2 Unconscious knowing: Psychoanalytic evidence in support of a radical epistemic view
9(44)
Introduction
9(2)
Knowing without seeing or believing: A very striking negative hallucination
11(3)
Differences between knowledge (knowing) and belief (believing)
14(5)
Similarities between knowledge (knowing) and belief (believing)
19(5)
First - and second - order knowledge and belief; believing what one knows; knowledge without (any sort of ) belief
24(17)
Unconscious knowledge/unconscious belief
41(2)
The priority of knowledge
43(3)
Psychoanalysis and the priority of knowledge
46(2)
References
48(5)
Part III Vagueness and a-rationality: Epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of mind
3 The limits of rationality: Vagueness, a case study
53(38)
Introduction
53(2)
A-rationality: General considerations
55(9)
Vagueness: General considerations
64(4)
A-rational objects
68(2)
Ontic vagueness
70(13)
Conclusions
83(2)
References
85(6)
Part IV Agency: Philosophy of action
4 Agency---'me'- ness in action
91(46)
Introduction
91(1)
Psychoanalytic (and other clinical) `me'- ness struggles
92(9)
`Me' in dreams, play, and other phenomena
101(7)
Philosophical concerns about my survival: What constitutes `me'?
108(11)
Agency: `Me'- ness in the philosophical cases
119(6)
Is agency really singular?
125(5)
Summary
130(1)
Conclusions
131(1)
References
131(6)
Part V Placebo effect: Psychoanalytic theory
5 The placebo effect: Psychoanalytic theory can help explain the phenomenon
137(12)
Introduction
137(1)
General findings and explanations
138(2)
Animal results: The role of conditioning in the placebo effect
140(1)
Implicit expectancy and the placebo effect
141(1)
Transference and the placebo effect
141(1)
Transference, conditioning, and implicit expectations: All are primary process mediators of placebo effects
142(3)
Conclusion
145(1)
References
145(4)
Part VI Explanations and conclusions: Philosophy of science
6 Explanations and conclusions
149(16)
Explanations:
Chapters 2-4
149(3)
Explanations:
Chapter 5
152(10)
Philosophy and psychoanalysis
162(1)
References
162(3)
Name Index 165(2)
Subject Index 167
Linda A.W. Brakel is an adjunct Associate Professor in Psychiatry at the University of Michigan Medical School, and an Associated Scholar at that university's Department of Philosophy. She is also a practicing psychoanalyst, and a faculty member at the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute. Brakel's research on a-rational thinking, at the crossroads of psychoanalytic theory and the philosophy of mind and action, includes empirical research on categorizations and dual processes, as well as philosophical and psychoanalytic articles. Prior to the current volume, her most recent publication is Philosophy, Psychoanalysis, and the A-Rational Mind (OUP, 2009)