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How to rethink psychology : new metaphors for understanding people and their behavior PDF

185 Pages·2016·12.496 MB·English
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How to Rethink Psychology Based on the author’s forty years of experience in psychology, philoso- phy, and the social sciences, H ow to Rethink Psychology argues that to understand people we need to know more about their contexts than the dominant modes of thinking and research presently allow. Drawing upon insights from sources as diverse as Freud, CBT, quantum physics, and Zen philosophy, the book offers several fascinating new metaphors for thinking about people and, in doing so, endeavors to create a psych- ology for the future. The book begins by discussing the signifi cance of the key metaphor underlying mainstream psychology today – the ‘particle’ or ‘causal’ metaphor – and explains the need for a shift towards new ‘wave’ or ‘contextual’ metaphors in order to appreciate how individual and social actions truly function. It explores new metaphors for thinking about the relationship between language and reality, and teaches the reader how they might reimagine the processes involved in the act of thinking itself. The book concludes with a consideration of how these new metaphors might be applied to practical methods of research, understanding, and effecting change. How to Rethink Psychology is important reading for upper-level and postgraduate students and researchers in the fi elds of social psychology, critical psychology, and the philosophy of psychology, and will espe- cially appeal to those studying behavior analysis and radical behavior- ism. It has also been written for the general reading public who enjoy exploring new ideas in science and thinking. Bernard Guerin is Professor of Psychology at the University of South Australia. This page intentionally left blank How to Rethink Psychology New metaphors for understanding people and their behavior Bernard Guerin First published 2016 by Routledge 27 Church Road, Hove, East Sussex BN3 2FA and by Routledge 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2016 Bernard Guerin The right of Bernard Guerin to be identifi ed as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identifi cation and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data Guerin, Bernard, 1957– How to rethink psychology : new metaphors for understanding people and their behavior / Bernard Guerin. pages cm 1. Psychology. 2. Thought and thinking. 3. Psycholinguistics. I. Title. BF121.G84 2016 150.1–dc23 2015007989 ISBN: 978-1-138-91653-1 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-138-91654-8 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-315-68955-5 (ebk) Typeset in Times New Roman by Out of House Publishing Contents List of tables ix Preface xi Acknowledgements xiii CHAPTER 1 Understanding our own psychology: alternative ways to think? 1 New metaphors to help rethink how people work 2 What will be different after rethinking? 6 Why bother? 7 Causes and contexts: shifting metaphors from current psychology 8 Sequential, causal, or contextual basis for human actions? 10 Metaphor 1. Our actions are like lumps of Plasticine 11 Why do we think action is sequential and constantly decided? 14 Thinking contextually 16 Metaphor 2. Contexts not causes for growing seeds into plants 17 We do not have a ‘control center’ 18 Contextual observation 19 Metaphor 3. Contextual observations of (blue) holistic elephants 21 The rethinking to take away from Chapter 1 22 vi Contents CHAPTER 2 The ubiquitous social: from social constructionism to social contextualism 26 Contextual infl uence better thought of as waves than particles: three metaphors 28 Metaphor 4. Understanding people is better thought of as attuned responding to external contexts using wave-thinking 34 Metaphor 5. We can utilize gravity even if physicists do not understand how it works 39 Metaphor 6. Think of attunement as sympathetic resonance 42 Twelve ways that being alone is social: how can we think that? 44 How do social relationships pervade our actions, thinking, and self-thinking? 56 What does the wave metaphor get us? 58 CHAPTER 3 Language use as the original virtual reality 65 Words do not control language use: social contexts do 65 Magic, words, and power 68 Language use as the original virtual reality 69 Metaphor 7. Language use as the original virtual reality 70 Two metaphors that help rethink language use as virtual reality 78 Back to electromagnetic waves 78 Metaphor 8. Language better thought of as attuned responses to waves than as reactions to particles 78 “It either happens or it doesn’t”: contexts are 100 percent 79 Contents vii Metaphor 9. Getting hit 100 percent by a brick and other brute facts of life 81 What does all this mean for language use? 84 How does this affect the analysis of language use? 90 What do we need to know about language-in-social-interaction to understand people? 91 CHAPTER 4 Thinking, self-talk, and how to read minds 96 Rethinking thoughts and thinking 100 Thinking and causality 100 Thoughts refi gured as virtual reality: the external social control over thoughts 102 Metaphor 10. Thinking can also be reimagined as virtual reality 102 Thoughts as associations: replacing this oldest metaphor 103 Metaphor 11. Thoughts are like the effects of waves rather than emitted particles 104 Seven key points for rethinking thinking 107 ‘We’ do not control thinking: all thoughts are intrusive thoughts 107 Words are not controlled by what is named and neither are thoughts 110 Why ‘consciousness’ is directed towards other people 111 Thinking is social – it depends on audiences 113 What are the events that happen when we ‘think’? The social dynamics of thinking 116 We can read people’s thoughts – in a way 119 Talking about ‘inner’ processes for utilization as rhetoric 120 viii Contents What do we know about contextual strategies of thinking? 121 Types of audiences and how they affect thinking 121 Ultimately, talking to oneself is from economic, social, cultural, historical, and environmental contexts 123 The social strategies of cognitive models 124 Conversational strategies in thoughts and thinking 128 Discursive strategies implicit in psychotherapies 130 Types of unconscious editing 132 Types of repression and similar strategies of thoughts 134 How can we rethink thoughts? 138 CHAPTER 5 The Zen of running our lives: doing, thinking, and talking 143 Summary of the plot so far 143 Summary description of life 143 Two short examples 145 Life, words, and Zen 148 Where to from here? 151 Practical methods of research, understanding, and change 151 Philosophy: on being very clear that actions, thinklings, and spoken words are not metaphysically, philosophically, or essentially different 152 How should we understand people? 157 Appendix: tractatus psychologica 160 Index 166 Tables 1.1 Metaphors that will be presented in this book 5 3.1 Comparison of language use and medical virtual reality machines 75 4.1 Analyzing intrusive thoughts 108 5.1 Metaphors that were presented in this book 144 5.2 Previous (incorrect) philosophical separations of things, people, and intervening activities with examples 153 5.3 The sources for believing (incorrectly) that different brute events can separate three metaphysical domains 155 5.4 Three types of dualism artifi cially produced by treating the three brute facts as metaphysically separate 156

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