Research Catalog

In defense of human consciousness

Title
In defense of human consciousness / Joseph F. Rychlak.
Author
Rychlak, Joseph F.
Publication
Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 1997.

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TextRequest in advance BF311 .R93 1997Off-site

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Description
xv, 351 pages : illustrations; 27 cm
Summary
  • Joseph F. Rychlak defies trends in psychology, sociology, and science that reduce the role of human intention in thought and behavior. This volume presents a model of the mind that reinforces the important role of free will in consciousness. Rychlak affirms that humans are purposive and have intentions that can best be explained by taking an internal perspective on consciousness. He confronts many essential questions about the nature of consciousness: Does free will exist?
  • Does thinking occur through a biological process? In keeping with the traditions of philosophy, Rychlak measures his own logical learning theory of consciousness against the theories of other philosophers, psychologists, and scientists. By contrasting and comparing his own theories with everything from psychoanalysis to evolution to the currently reigning interpretations of consciousness and the new science of artificial intelligence, Rychlak consistently proves the applicablitity of his approach.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 309-328) and indexes.
Contents
Ch. 1. In Search of a Grounding -- Ch. 2. Shifting Grounds to the Logos -- Ch. 3. The Concept of Psychic Consciousness Across the Ages -- Ch. 4. Psychoanalyzing Psychic Consciousness -- Ch. 5. The Evolutionary Connection -- Ch. 6. The Telic Triune: Consciousness, Self, and Free Will -- Ch. 7. Computers and Consciousness -- Ch. 8. Altered States of Consciousness -- Ch. 9. Collectives and Consciousness -- Ch. 10. Sundry Points for Further Consideration.
ISBN
1557984212 (alk. paper)
LCCN
97003877
OCLC
  • 36241750
  • ocm36241750
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries