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Metaphors in the History of Psychology
Hardback

Metaphors in the History of Psychology

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When psychologists speak of human memory as a matter of ‘retrieving’ earlier ‘input’ from ‘storage’, they are basing their discussion of memory upon a series of metaphors drawn from cybernetic theory (the science of communications and control) and computer technology. Similarly, when clinical psychologists try to ‘relieve’ the ‘pressure’ that someone has been ‘repressing’ inside, their actions are directed by the hydraulic metaphors that have shaped their understanding of the ‘linear workings’ of ‘psychodynamics’. The contributors to this volume argue that psychologists and their predecessors have invariably turned to metaphor in order to articulate their descriptions, theories, and practical interventions with regard to psychological functioning. By specifying the major metaphors in the history of psychology, these contributors have offered a new key’ to understanding this critically important area of human knowledge. Metaphors in the History of Psychology describes and analyses the ways in which psychological accounts of brain functioning, consciousness, cognition, emotion, motivation, learning, and behaviour have been shaped - and are still being shaped - by the central metaphors used by contemporary psychologists and their predecessors. The volume is a stylistically and substantively coherent work of essays on a theme which has become an issue of central concern in a variety of disciplines ranging from linguistics and literary studies to cognitive science, psychology, and philosophy. Through the identification of these metaphors, the contributors to this volume have provided a remarkably useful guide to the history, current orientations, and future prospects of modern psychology.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
27 July 1990
Pages
400
ISBN
9780521371667

When psychologists speak of human memory as a matter of ‘retrieving’ earlier ‘input’ from ‘storage’, they are basing their discussion of memory upon a series of metaphors drawn from cybernetic theory (the science of communications and control) and computer technology. Similarly, when clinical psychologists try to ‘relieve’ the ‘pressure’ that someone has been ‘repressing’ inside, their actions are directed by the hydraulic metaphors that have shaped their understanding of the ‘linear workings’ of ‘psychodynamics’. The contributors to this volume argue that psychologists and their predecessors have invariably turned to metaphor in order to articulate their descriptions, theories, and practical interventions with regard to psychological functioning. By specifying the major metaphors in the history of psychology, these contributors have offered a new key’ to understanding this critically important area of human knowledge. Metaphors in the History of Psychology describes and analyses the ways in which psychological accounts of brain functioning, consciousness, cognition, emotion, motivation, learning, and behaviour have been shaped - and are still being shaped - by the central metaphors used by contemporary psychologists and their predecessors. The volume is a stylistically and substantively coherent work of essays on a theme which has become an issue of central concern in a variety of disciplines ranging from linguistics and literary studies to cognitive science, psychology, and philosophy. Through the identification of these metaphors, the contributors to this volume have provided a remarkably useful guide to the history, current orientations, and future prospects of modern psychology.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
27 July 1990
Pages
400
ISBN
9780521371667