Description

The Family Emotional System: An Integrative Concept for Theory, Science, and Practice presents an ongoing dialogue among scientists, family investigators, and clinicians related to a natural systems view of the family and human behavior that has been occurring over several decades. The concept of the family as an emotional system, as defined in Bowen theory, is presented as the principal integrative concept underlying this dialogue and an effort to move toward a science of human behavior. As a natural system, the family forms the immediate and most important context for individual development, and may be the most central and important environment shaping brain development across the lifetime of the individual.

This book explains how the family system can serve as an integrative framework within which specific factual discoveries and hypotheses from many areas of science can be brought together and understood as various manifestations of a coherent whole. The Family Emotional System provides understanding of what is entailed in conceptualizing the family as an emotional system, a sense of the breadth and depth of knowledge the sciences are contributing to this effort, and examples of how this theoretical framework contributes to family research and practice. The richness and excitement occurring in the ongoing dialogue between scientists and Bowen family systems practitioners and researchers is captured along with the promise it holds for the study of human behavior.

Table of Contents

Part I Bowen Theory and the Family Emotional System
Chapter 1 Toward a Science of Human Behavior
Robert J. Noone and Daniel V. Papero
Chapter 2 The Family Emotional System
Daniel V. Papero
Chapter 3 Multigenerational Family Emotional Process as a Source of Individual Differences in Adaptiveness
Robert J. Noone
Chapter 4 The Predictability of the Family Emotional System
Randall T. Frost
Chapter 5 The Family as an Emotional Unit Concept: Origins and Early History
John F. Butler
Part IIScientific Contributions to an Emotional Systems Perspective
Chapter 6 Epigenetic Effects of Parental Care within and across Generations
Frances A. Champagne and James P. Curley
Chapter 7 Early Context-Dependent Epigenetic Modifications and the Shaping of Brain and Behavior
David Crews and Robert J. Noone
Chapter 8Nonhuman Primate Models of Family Systems
Charles T. Snowdon
Chapter 9 The Instinctual Foundations of Infant Minds: How Primary Affects Guide the Construction of Their Higher Cognitive Proclivities and

Product details

Published 30 Oct 2015
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 1
ISBN 9781978751279
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 2 b/w illustrations; 1 b/w photos; 8 graphs; 3 charts;
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

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