Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept - Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior

Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept - Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior

von: Wynn Schwartz

Elsevier Reference Monographs, 2019

ISBN: 9780128139868 , 281 Seiten

Format: PDF, ePUB

Kopierschutz: DRM

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Preis: 131,00 EUR

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Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept - Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior


 

Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept maps the common ground of behavioral science. The absence of a shared foundation has given us fragmentation, a siloed state of psychological theory and practice. And the science? The integrity of choice, accountability, reason, and intention are necessary commitments at the cornerstone of civilization and any person-centered psychotherapy, but when taught along with a 'scientificā€ requirement for reductionism and determinism, reside in contradictory intellectual universes. Peter Ossorio developed the Person Concept to remedy these problems. This book is an introduction to his work and the community of scientists, scholars, and practitioners of Descriptive Psychology.
Ossorio offered these maxims that capture the discipline's spirit: 1. The world makes sense, and so do people. They make sense to begin with. 2. It's one world. Everything fits together. Everything is related to everything else. 3. Things are what they are and not something else instead. 4. Don't count on the world being simpler than it has to be.
The Person Concept is a single, coherent concept of interdependent component concepts: IndividualĀ  Persons; Behavior as Intentional Action; Language and Verbal Behavior; Community and Culture; and World and Reality.
Descriptive Psychology uses preempirical, theory-neutral formulations and methods, to make explicit the implicit structure of the behavioral sciences. The goal is a framework with a place for what is already known with room for what is yet to be found.
  • Provides a way to compare theories, coordinate empirical findings, and negotiate competent disagreement
  • Offers guidance for effective case formulation and integration of therapies
  • Explores the dilemmas of personhood and the complexities of human and nonhuman action, investigating 'what is a person, and how can we be sure?'
  • Follows the implications of Hedonics, Prudence, Ethics, and Aesthetics as intrinsic perspectives and reasons for action
  • Applies these concepts to personality and social dynamics, consciousness, relationship change, emotional behavior, deliberation, and judgment
  • Provides a guide to establishing and restoring empathy--especially when it's difficult


Wynn Schwartz received his undergraduate degree from Duke University, his doctorate from the University of Colorado, Boulder, and trained as a research psychoanalyst at the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. He is a lecturer at Harvard Medical School and a professor at William James College. He has taught at Wellesley College, the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, the Massachusetts Institute of Psychoanalysis, and the Harvard Extension School. Dr. Schwartz is on the Editorial Board of The American Journal of Psychotherapy and maintains a psychotherapy and supervision practice in Boston where he works with individuals and couples.