The Human Person [electronic resource] : What Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas Offer Modern Psychology / by Thomas L. Spalding, James M. Stedman, Christina L. Gagn©♭, Matthew Kostelecky.
Material type:
- 9783030339128
- 153 23
- BF201
Item type | Current library | Call number | Materials specified | Status | |
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Reformational Study Centre General library | 153 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | What Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas Offer Modern Psychology | Available |
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153 Consciousness : | 153 Cognitive psychology / | 153 Cognitive psychology : | 153 The Human Person What Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas Offer Modern Psychology / | 153 ERIK Spel en visie | 153 KNOW The art of thinking. | 153.12 Memory |
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: The Metaphysical Foundations of the Human Person -- Chapter 3: Human and Non-Human Cognition -- Chapter 4: Embodied and Humanistic Views of Cognition -- Chapter 5: Emotion and Cognition -- Chapter 6: Human Flourishing -- Chapter 7: The Human in Society -- Chapter 8: Summary and Conclusions.
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This book introduces the Aristotelian-Thomistic view of the human person to a contemporary audience, and reviews the ways in which this view could provide a philosophically sound foundation for modern psychology. The book presents the current state of psychology and offers critiques of the current philosophical foundations. In its presentation of the fundamental metaphysical commitments of the Aristotelian-Thomistic view, it places the human being within the broader understanding of the world. Chapters discuss the Aristotelian-Thomistic view of human and non-human cognition as well as the relationship between cognition and emotion. In addition, the book discusses the Aristotelian-Thomistic conception of human growth and development, including how the virtue theory relates to current psychological approaches to normal human development, the development of character problems that lead to psychopathology, current conceptions of positive psychology, and the place of the individual in the social world. The book ends with a summary of how Aristotelian-Thomistic theory relates to science in general and psychology in particular. The Human Person will be of interest to psychologists and cognitive scientists working within a number of subfields, including developmental psychology, social psychology, cognitive psychology, and clinical psychology, and to philosophers working on the philosophy of psychology, philosophy of mind, and the interaction between historical philosophy and contemporary science, as well as linguists and computer scientists interested in psychology of language and artificial intelligence. .
Mode of access: World Wide Web.