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Description

This volume addresses itself to the ways in which the so-called 'new sciences of complexity' can deepen and broaden neurobiological and psychological theories of mind. Complexity theory has gained increasing attention over the past 20 years across diverse areas of inquiry, including mathematics, physics, economics, biology, and the social sciences. Complexity theory concerns itself with how nonlinear dynamical systems evolve and change over time and draws on research arising from chaos theory, self-organization, artificial intelligence and cellular automata, to name a few. This emerging discipline shows many points of convergence with psychological theory and practice, emphasizing that history is irreversible and discontinuous, that small early interventions can have large and unexpected later effects, that each life trajectory is unique yet patterned, that measurement error is not random and cannot be justifiably distributed equally across experimental conditions, that a system's collective and coordinated organization is emergent and often arises from simple components in interaction, and that change is more likely to emerge under conditions of optimal turbulence.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Complexity theory as the parent science of psychoanalysis
Chapter 3 A biological theory of brain function and its relevance to psychoanalysis
Chapter 4 Neurodynamics, state, agency and psychological functioning
Chapter 5 Emergence: When a difference in degree becomes a difference in kind
Chapter 6 Emergence and psychological morphogenesis
Chapter 7 The dynamics of development
Chapter 8 The language of complexity theory

Product details

Published Apr 18 2007
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 192
ISBN 9798216314745
Imprint Jason Aronson, Inc.
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Craig Piers

Anthology Editor

John P. Muller

Anthology Editor

Joseph Brent

Contributor

Jim Grigsby

Contributor

John Muller

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