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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: W.M. BernsteinPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.620kg ISBN: 9780367102340ISBN 10: 036710234 Pages: 250 Publication Date: 05 July 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPlan of the book , Preface , Introduction , Part I , Scientific concepts and human evolution , Theory-building organisations , Barriers to knowledge and theoretical integration , Recent consensus and longstanding problems , Controlling sensations, concepts, feelings, and overt behaviour , Recapitulation of axiomatic assumptions and their connections , Part II , Parasympathetic systems and affect theory , Autonomic nervous systems I: stress and anxiety , Scientific concepts and human evolution , Psychopathology , Part III , Information processing, mental competence and psychotherapy , Authority, self-control, and metatheory , Moving through space, time, and light , L’esprit D’escalier , Psychosomatics in religion and scienceReviews"""Dr William Bernstein's The Realisation of Concepts presents a fruitful expansion of emerging scientific concepts to probe the mind/body enigma. His broad mission richly details diverse sorts of experiential awareness that arise from interactions between the autonomic nervous systems and the sub-cortical and neocortical parts of the brain. The book also describes how certain implicit ideas from religion, politics, science, and medicine work as barriers to integrating psychological and biological theories. He views all experience as matters of curiosity that are not to be immobilised prematurely. Mental competence is defined as the ability to regulate attention and remain in contact with emerging psychophysiological processes. Bernstein adroitly leads the reader through this enjoyable and stimulating process.""--Dr Jack Wiggins, former President of the American Psychological Association and Founder of the American Board of Medical Psychology ""W. M. Bernstein is one of the most unorthodox authors in neuropsychoanalysis today. And his approach to the brain-mind problem is guided by one simple principle: a good theory is a theory that has enough depth, in other words, its most general concepts should explain parsimoniously more specific ideas at subordinate levels of analysis. Such an axiom is the heart of this book, a quest to critically review the problem of affect regulation, integrating findings from social psychology, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience. The Realisation of Concepts is a welcome contribution to the field of neuropsychoanalysis, advancing our understanding on how drives and representations are related to each other.""--Christian E. Salas, PhD, clinical neuropsychologist and psychoanalytic psychotherapist ""Dr Bernstein continues to develop his unique, timely, and important view of how subjective experiences are both causes and effects of biological processes. In this book he further elaborates how complex information and conflict at both psychological and physiological levels may find resolution in valid semantic concepts, thereby increasing mental control and advancing human evolution. The Realisation of Concepts provides a much-needed conceptual container to help make sense of the momentous paradigm shifts occurring in medicine and psychology. As such, this book is a key contribution to integrative disciplines including medical psychology, neuropsychology, and neuropsychoanalysis. It is also a fascinating and enlightening philosophy of mind in its own right.""--Jeffrey D. Cole, PhD, clinical and medical psychologist, Director, Board of Directors" W. M. Bernstein is one of the most unorthodox authors in neuropsychoanalysis today. And his approach to the brain-mind problem is guided by one simple principle: a good theory is a theory that has enough depth, in other words, its most general concepts should explain parsimoniously more specific ideas at subordinate levels of analysis. Such an axiom is the heart of this book, a quest to critically review the problem of affect regulation, integrating findings from social psychology, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience. The Realisation of Concepts is a welcome contribution to the field of neuropsychoanalysis, advancing our understanding on how drives and representations are related to each other. --Christian E. Salas, PhD, clinical neuropsychologist and psychoanalytic psychotherapist Dr William Bernstein's The Realisation of Concepts presents a fruitful expansion of emerging scientific concepts to probe the mind/body enigma. His broad mission richly details diverse sorts of experiential awareness that arise from interactions between the autonomic nervous systems and the sub-cortical and neocortical parts of the brain. The book also describes how certain implicit ideas from religion, politics, science, and medicine work as barriers to integrating psychological and biological theories. He views all experience as matters of curiosity that are not to be immobilised prematurely. Mental competence is defined as the ability to regulate attention and remain in contact with emerging psychophysiological processes. Bernstein adroitly leads the reader through this enjoyable and stimulating process. --Dr Jack Wiggins, former President of the American Psychological Association and Founder of the American Board of Medical Psychology Dr Bernstein continues to develop his unique, timely, and important view of how subjective experiences are both causes and effects of biological processes. In this book he further elaborates how complex information and conflict at both psychological and physiological levels may find resolution in valid semantic concepts, thereby increasing mental control and advancing human evolution. The Realisation of Concepts provides a much-needed conceptual container to help make sense of the momentous paradigm shifts occurring in medicine and psychology. As such, this book is a key contribution to integrative disciplines including medical psychology, neuropsychology, and neuropsychoanalysis. It is also a fascinating and enlightening philosophy of mind in its own right. --Jeffrey D. Cole, PhD, clinical and medical psychologist, Director, Board of Directors Dr William Bernstein's The Realisation of Concepts presents a fruitful expansion of emerging scientific concepts to probe the mind/body enigma. His broad mission richly details diverse sorts of experiential awareness that arise from interactions between the autonomic nervous systems and the sub-cortical and neocortical parts of the brain. The book also describes how certain implicit ideas from religion, politics, science, and medicine work as barriers to integrating psychological and biological theories. He views all experience as matters of curiosity that are not to be immobilised prematurely. Mental competence is defined as the ability to regulate attention and remain in contact with emerging psychophysiological processes. Bernstein adroitly leads the reader through this enjoyable and stimulating process. --Dr Jack Wiggins, former President of the American Psychological Association and Founder of the American Board of Medical Psychology W. M. Bernstein is one of the most unorthodox authors in neuropsychoanalysis today. And his approach to the brain-mind problem is guided by one simple principle: a good theory is a theory that has enough depth, in other words, its most general concepts should explain parsimoniously more specific ideas at subordinate levels of analysis. Such an axiom is the heart of this book, a quest to critically review the problem of affect regulation, integrating findings from social psychology, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience. The Realisation of Concepts is a welcome contribution to the field of neuropsychoanalysis, advancing our understanding on how drives and representations are related to each other. --Christian E. Salas, PhD, clinical neuropsychologist and psychoanalytic psychotherapist Dr Bernstein continues to develop his unique, timely, and important view of how subjective experiences are both causes and effects of biological processes. In this book he further elaborates how complex information and conflict at both psychological and physiological levels may find resolution in valid semantic concepts, thereby increasing mental control and advancing human evolution. The Realisation of Concepts provides a much-needed conceptual container to help make sense of the momentous paradigm shifts occurring in medicine and psychology. As such, this book is a key contribution to integrative disciplines including medical psychology, neuropsychology, and neuropsychoanalysis. It is also a fascinating and enlightening philosophy of mind in its own right. --Jeffrey D. Cole, PhD, clinical and medical psychologist, Director, Board of Directors Dr Bernstein continues to develop his unique, timely, and important view of how subjective experiences are both causes and effects of biological processes. In this book he further elaborates how complex information and conflict at both psychological and physiological levels may find resolution in valid semantic concepts, thereby increasing mental control and advancing human evolution. The Realisation of Concepts provides a much-needed conceptual container to help make sense of the momentous paradigm shifts occurring in medicine and psychology. As such, this book is a key contribution to integrative disciplines including medical psychology, neuropsychology, and neuropsychoanalysis. It is also a fascinating and enlightening philosophy of mind in its own right. --Jeffrey D. Cole, PhD, clinical and medical psychologist, Director, Board of Directors W. M. Bernstein is one of the most unorthodox authors in neuropsychoanalysis today. And his approach to the brain-mind problem is guided by one simple principle: a good theory is a theory that has enough depth, in other words, its most general concepts should explain parsimoniously more specific ideas at subordinate levels of analysis. Such an axiom is the heart of this book, a quest to critically review the problem of affect regulation, integrating findings from social psychology, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience. The Realisation of Concepts is a welcome contribution to the field of neuropsychoanalysis, advancing our understanding on how drives and representations are related to each other. --Christian E. Salas, PhD, clinical neuropsychologist and psychoanalytic psychotherapist Dr William Bernstein's The Realisation of Concepts presents a fruitful expansion of emerging scientific concepts to probe the mind/body enigma. His broad mission richly details diverse sorts of experiential awareness that arise from interactions between the autonomic nervous systems and the sub-cortical and neocortical parts of the brain. The book also describes how certain implicit ideas from religion, politics, science, and medicine work as barriers to integrating psychological and biological theories. He views all experience as matters of curiosity that are not to be immobilised prematurely. Mental competence is defined as the ability to regulate attention and remain in contact with emerging psychophysiological processes. Bernstein adroitly leads the reader through this enjoyable and stimulating process. --Dr Jack Wiggins, former President of the American Psychological Association and Founder of the American Board of Medical Psychology Author InformationWM Bernstein Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |