Affects As Process

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A01=Joseph M. Jones
affiliational
animal
Animal Kingdom
Author_Joseph M. Jones
Biobehavioral Shift
Category=JMA
Category=JMR
Complex Mood
Core Affects
crisis
Distress Response
Divided Mind
dominance
Dominance Hierarchies
Dynamic Contours
early childhood affect development
emotional maturation
Emotional Object Constancy
Enactive Thought
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
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Follow
Held
hierarchy
infantile sexuality
Karl Pribram
kingdom
Limbic System
Mastery System
Metaphysical Sanction
motivational
Object Permanence
prerepresentational infant
psychodynamic theory
rapprochement
Rapprochement Crisis
Reptilian Brain
Smooth
Spinal Cord
Stranger Anxiety
Superimposes
symbolic thought integration
system
systems
Thought Dysfunction
unconscious processes
Wo

Product details

  • ISBN 9780881631258
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In this readable meditation on the nature of emotional experience, Joseph Jones takes the reader on a fascinating walking-tour of current research findings bearing on emotional development. Beginning with a nuanced reappraisal of Freud's philosophical premises, he argues that Freud's reliance on "primary process" as the means of linking body and mind inadvertantly stripped affects of their process role. Further, the resulting emphasis on fantasy left the problem of conceptualizing the mental life of the prerepresentational infant in a theoretical limbo.

Affects as Process offers an elegantly simple way out of this impasse. Drawing in the literatures of child development, ethology, and neuroscience, Jones argues that, in their simplest form, affects are best understood as the presymbolic representatives and governors of motivational systems. So conceptualized, affects, and not primary process, constitute the initial processing system of the prerepresentational infant. It then becomes possible to re-vision early development as the sequential maturation of different motivational systems, each governed by a specific presymbolic affect. More complex emotional states, which emerge when the toddler begins to think symbolically, represent the integration of motivational systems and thought as maturation plunges the child into a world of loves and hates that cannot be escaped simply through behavior. Jones' reappraisal of emotional development in early childhood and beyond clarifies the strengths and weaknesses of such traditional concepts as infantile sexuality, object relations, internalization, splitting, and the emergence of the dynamic unconscious. The surprising terminus of his excursion, moreover, is the novel perspective on the self as an emergent phenomenon reflecting the integration of affective and symbolic processing systems.

Joseph M. Jones, M.D., is a Training and Supervising Analyst as the Los Angeles Psychoanalytic Institute and the Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis. He is on the clinical faculty of the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and maintains a private practice in the West Los Angeles area.

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