Turning psychology into a social science / Bernard Guerin.
Material type: TextSeries: Exploring the environmental and social foundations of human behaviourPublication details: Routledge Abingdon, Oxon, 2021Description: xi, 170 pages.: 22CMISBN:- 9780367898120
- 302 23 GUE-T 2021 1600036
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | Clinical Psychology Library Book Cart | Book | 302 GUE-T 2021 1600036 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C 1 | Available | 1600036 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of contents -- Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- A note on referencing -- 1 The opposite of rational is social, not irrational or crazy: How the 'social' got squeezed out of Western history -- Some background -- Why was the 'social' excluded? -- Labelling the 'non-rational' -- Science -- Mental health -- Economics -- Law and legal systems -- Government and bureaucracy -- Ecology -- Religion and spirituality -- Logic -- References -- 2 How are our behaviours shaped by societal 'systems' and 'structures'?
How do we get from sociological to 'individual'? -- Is there even an individual? -- Where do societal systems and structures come from? -- How do societal systems and structures impact on 'individual' behaviour? -- Examples of deconstructing some 'psychological' structures and systems -- Grammar -- 'Personality' -- Social structures -- Patriarchy -- How do we intervene? -- References -- 3 The societal ecologies of modern life are our 'psychology' -- How can we link people's actions, talking, and thinking to the large societal contexts? -- A little bit of quick historical context
Some social properties of early forms of resource distribution and social relationships (economics) -- What happened next in human history? The rise of modernity -- What are our current life contexts that shape our actions, talking, and thinking? -- What are these systems that shape our behaviours now? -- From society to individual behaviour -- The first basic consequences -- The specific systems built in order to manage large populations of strangers: welcome to your jungle -- How are we affected by these systems? -- Social relationships -- Economics and resource distribution
Bureaucratic neoliberalism -- The bigger picture -- References -- 4 Contextualizing beliefs as everyday language strategies -- Rethinking beliefs -- Contextualizing beliefs and their social properties or uses -- Exercise -- Contextualizing how beliefs are changed -- Why it is important to radically rethink beliefs: social and political changes and effects -- Examples of language use (stating beliefs) and how this engenders resources -- References -- 5 Self, identity, consciousness, and meaning as social actions in context -- Contextualizing the 'self'
Special features of self in kin-based communities -- Special features of self in modernity -- Self-awareness and consciousness -- What does thinking about 'self' do, and especially thinking about yourself? -- Summary: "why does it feel like 'my thoughts control my behaviour'?" -- Reasons and meaning -- Reasons -- Meaning -- References -- 6 A new look at Marxism, psychology, and social contextual analysis -- Social relations of production = resource-social relationship pathways -- Dialectical = contextual? -- Conceptualizing contradictions and opposing forces in material action and real life
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