Mapping Psychic Reality

Regular price €167.40
A01=James Rose
Author_James Rose
Brandon Centre
Care Taker
Category=JMAF
CBCL Questionnaire
Charles M. T. Hanly
clinical case studies
Dead Mother Complex
Ego Cogito Cogitatum
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eq_isMigrated=2
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Headless Bodies
Innate Preconception
Irreducible Subjectivity
Iterative Quality
James S. Rose
Logistic Difference Equation
Marcia Cavell
measurement of experience
objective study of subjective experience
Oedipal Identification
patient analyst relationship
Patient's Psychic Reality
Patient’s Psychic Reality
Paul Whittle
Primary Maternal Object
Progressive Triangulation
Propositional Sort
Psychic Atopia
Psychic Hole
Psychic Retreat
Psycho Pathology
Psychoanalytic Setting
psychoanalytic theory
Ronald Britton
scientific method in psychology
Strange Attractor
subjectivity in psychology
Terrible Persecutor
Thick Skinned Patient
Virtual Object
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367106881
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 146 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book is about how we can deepen our understanding of subjectivity through the use of the concept of triangulation. Fundamentally, this book seeks to address the question of how we can be objective about subjectivity. If psychology, as a scientific discipline, is concerned with the study of human experience, which is essentially subjective; then we are faced with the problem of how apply the scientific method, as it is commonly understood. If experience is essentially unique to the experiencer, then there seems to be a basic incompatibility with the scientific method. As currently practised, this method searches for psychic phenomena, which can be validly measured e.g. intelligence; showing a range of individual differences. But this does not enable us to examine individual experience. An individual's experience seems to become impenetrable because generalisation across different individuals' experience entails the loss of individuality in the generalisation.
James Rose