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Attention and the holistic approach to behavior
pp. 335-358
Résumé
The fate of "consciousness' as a scientific concept is one of the most ironic paradoxes in the history of psychology. Once the central issue, the very essence of what psychology was all about, it is nowadays a peripheral concern, an antiquated idea about as useful as ether and phlogiston are to physicists. According to Murphy and Kovach (1972, p. 51), consciousness "has been a storm center in psychology for a century. Some regard it as an unfortunate and superfluous assumption. . . . Others regard consciousness as only one of many expressions of psychological reality; indeed many psychologists think that the recognition of a psychological realm far greater than the conscious realm is the great emancipating principle of all modern psychology."
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Pope Kenneth S., Singer Jerome L. (1978) The stream of consciousness: scientific investigations into the flow of human experience. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 335-358
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4684-2466-9_13
Citation complète:
Csíkszentmihályi Mihály, 1978, Attention and the holistic approach to behavior. In K. S. Pope & J. L. Singer (eds.) The stream of consciousness (335-358). Dordrecht, Springer.