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Book Description

In this provocative book, Christina Lee takes a consciously critical approach to the apparently unchallenged principle that conscious thought is the cause of all human behavior. Without becoming polemical or destructive, she reconsiders a wide range of issues in mainstream American and European social psychology.

Suitable for an international audience, the book deals with issues in mainstream American and European social psychology. It assumes some familiarity with contemporary social and applied psychology, and would be appropriate as a text or supplementary reading for senior undergraduate and postgraduate courses in social psychology and psychological theory, although it is also written with an academic research audience in mind. While it is written largely for psychologists, it would also be of interest to academics from other social-science disciplines with a general interest in explanations of individual social behavior.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Halftitle
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Preface
  7. 1 Cognitive Dominance: The Centrality of Cognitive Explanations in Social Psychology
  8. 2 Science and Explanation: Distinguishing Between Commonsense Description and Scientific Explanation
  9. 3 Setting Limits: Improving the Existing Cognitive Models
  10. 4 Thinking Makes It So: The Presumption That Cognition Causes Everything
  11. 5 Unconscious Cognition: Elaboration of Ideas to Shore Up a Failing Paradigm
  12. 6 Unseating Cognition: Behaving Independently of Conscious Thought
  13. 7 Rationality: The Essential Human Characteristic?
  14. 8 The Politics of Cognition: On the Fatal Attractiveness of Cognitive Models
  15. 9 New Directions: Alternatives to a Monolithic Psychology of Cognition
  16. References
  17. Author Index
  18. Subject Index
18.189.193.172