Encountering the World: Toward an Ecological Psychology

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Oxford University Press, 1996 M08 29 - 224 páginas
Encountering the World reorients modern psychology by finding a viable middle ground between the study of nerve cells and cultural analysis. The emerging field of ecological psychology focuses on the "human niche" and our uniquely evolved modes of action and interaction. Rejecting both mechanistic cognitive science and reductionistic neuroscience, the author offers a new psychology that combines ecological and experimental methods to help us better understand the ways in which people and animals make their way through the world. The book provides a comprehensive treatment of ecological psychology and a unique synthesis of the work of Darwin, neural Darwinism, and modern ecologists with James Gibson's approach to perception. The author presents detailed discussions on communication, sociality, cognition, and language--topics often overlooked by ecological psychologists. Other issues covered include ecological approaches to animal behavior, neural mechanisms, perception, action, and interaction. Provocative and controversial, Encountering the World makes a significant contribution to the debate over the nature of psychology.
 

Contenido

The Significance of the Psychological
3
Regulation versus Construction
9
An Evolutionary Psychology
20
A New Ecology for Psychology
29
The Importance of Information
47
Functional Systems and the Mechanisms of Behavior
68
Varieties of Action Systems
83
The Effort After Value and Meaning
96
Becoming a Person
126
The Daily Life of the Mind
140
Entering the Linguistic Environment
153
Streams of Thought
169
The Significance of Ecological Psychology
184
References
191
Index
207
Derechos de autor

The Human Environment
111

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