Description

Book Synopsis
How have figures of speech configured new concepts of time, space, and mind throughout history? Brian J. McVeigh answers this question in A Psychohistory of Metaphors: Envisioning Time, Space, and Self through the Centuries by exploring meta-framing: our ever-increasing capability to step back from the environment, search out its familiar features to explain the unfamiliar, and generate as if forms of knowledge and metaphors of location and vision. This book demonstrates how analogizing and abstracting have altered spatio-visual perceptions, expanding our introspective capabilities and allowing us to adapt to changing social circumstances.

Trade Review
Brian McVeigh extends Jaynes’s ideas on metaphor and thought, expands upon the different features of consciousness, explains the interrelatedness of our conceptions of time, space, and the self, and explores some of the implications of our newly learned inner life—the consequences of our consciousness. His ideas constitute a significant step forward to both understanding the metaphorical basis of thought and the human condition. -- Marcel Kuijsten, Julian Jaynes Society
McVeigh’s Psychohistory traces in detail the development of introspection, augmenting the ideas of Julian Jaynes. He explains how and why introspection developed in all its variations. He presents a well-documented history of this development in its cultural contexts. This is one of the books Jaynes said needed to be written. It provides a fascinating history of the often confusing and rarely documented cultural evolution of human consciousness. A must-read for scholars of history of the mind and Julian Jaynes. -- John F. Hainly, Southern University
McVeigh extends the work of the psychologist Julian Jaynes by revealing the close coupling between the character of the interior self and the ever-changing social context . . . A Psychohistory of Metaphors is a welcome and important contribution to our understanding of the conscious narrative self. But beyond its standing as an invaluable resource, it is also a pleasure to read. With personal stories of McVeigh’s childhood wonderings about the locations of heaven and hell, for example, seamlessly woven into texts of academic excellence, the book is as engaging as it is informative. With such depth and commitment to scholarship, this book promises to be a source of continual surprises and understandings over multiple readings. It is one of those books to keep close by on the shelf for many years to come. -- Bill Rowe, Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics

Table of Contents
Foreword Acknowledgments and Notes to Reader Prologue - Explaining History's “Inward Turn” – Chapter 1 - My Search for Heaven and Hell – Chapter 2 - Purposes and Premises: Tracing the Trajectories of Human Experience – Chapter 3 - The Magic of Metaphors: How Our Minds Make the World – Chapter 4 - Unpacking the “Black Box” of Conscious Interiority Part One - Space: Hollowing Out the Person – Chapter 5 - Envisioning the Invisible: Spatializing the Soul – Chapter 6 - Invoking Introspectable Worlds – Chapter 7 - The Collapse of Premodern Cosmology Part Two - Psyche: The Origins of Scientific Psychology – Chapter 8 - The Foundations of the Modern Study of Mind – Chapter 9 - The Great Cosmic Split: Dualism – Chapter 10 - Reactions to the Cartesian Split – Chapter 11 - Early Psychology: Making Visible the Contents of the Soul Part Three - Time: Modern Millenarianism and Politics as “Progress” – Chapter 12 - Meta-Framing Time: The Invention of History – Chapter 13 - Liberating the Psyche: The Emerging Faith in Progress – Chapter 14 - The History of Humankind: Climbing the Ladder of Civilization – Chapter 15 - Envisaging the Future as Paradise Part Four - Self: Turning the World Inside Out – Chapter 16 - The Changeable Self through the Centuries – Chapter 17 - The Narratized Individual as Social Actor – Chapter 18 - The Self as Mirror in Historical Perspective – Chapter 19 - The Birth of Modern Psychology Epilogue - Visualizing New Vistas of Modernity and Selfhood – Chapter 20 - The Therapeutic Turn – Chapter 21 - Self-Idolatry: The Dark Side of the Psychotherapeutic Society – Chapter 22 - Modern Spatiality, the Soul, and the Psyche Appendix A: How to Open the “Black Box”: Cultural Psychology Appendix B: What Conscious Interiority Is Not Appendix C: Spaces: Real and Imaginary Appendix D: The Visible, Invisible, and Introspectable References Index About the Author

A Psychohistory of Metaphors

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    A Hardback by Brian J. McVeigh

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/4/2016 12:04:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498520287, 978-1498520287
      ISBN10: 1498520286

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      How have figures of speech configured new concepts of time, space, and mind throughout history? Brian J. McVeigh answers this question in A Psychohistory of Metaphors: Envisioning Time, Space, and Self through the Centuries by exploring meta-framing: our ever-increasing capability to step back from the environment, search out its familiar features to explain the unfamiliar, and generate as if forms of knowledge and metaphors of location and vision. This book demonstrates how analogizing and abstracting have altered spatio-visual perceptions, expanding our introspective capabilities and allowing us to adapt to changing social circumstances.

      Trade Review
      Brian McVeigh extends Jaynes’s ideas on metaphor and thought, expands upon the different features of consciousness, explains the interrelatedness of our conceptions of time, space, and the self, and explores some of the implications of our newly learned inner life—the consequences of our consciousness. His ideas constitute a significant step forward to both understanding the metaphorical basis of thought and the human condition. -- Marcel Kuijsten, Julian Jaynes Society
      McVeigh’s Psychohistory traces in detail the development of introspection, augmenting the ideas of Julian Jaynes. He explains how and why introspection developed in all its variations. He presents a well-documented history of this development in its cultural contexts. This is one of the books Jaynes said needed to be written. It provides a fascinating history of the often confusing and rarely documented cultural evolution of human consciousness. A must-read for scholars of history of the mind and Julian Jaynes. -- John F. Hainly, Southern University
      McVeigh extends the work of the psychologist Julian Jaynes by revealing the close coupling between the character of the interior self and the ever-changing social context . . . A Psychohistory of Metaphors is a welcome and important contribution to our understanding of the conscious narrative self. But beyond its standing as an invaluable resource, it is also a pleasure to read. With personal stories of McVeigh’s childhood wonderings about the locations of heaven and hell, for example, seamlessly woven into texts of academic excellence, the book is as engaging as it is informative. With such depth and commitment to scholarship, this book promises to be a source of continual surprises and understandings over multiple readings. It is one of those books to keep close by on the shelf for many years to come. -- Bill Rowe, Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics

      Table of Contents
      Foreword Acknowledgments and Notes to Reader Prologue - Explaining History's “Inward Turn” – Chapter 1 - My Search for Heaven and Hell – Chapter 2 - Purposes and Premises: Tracing the Trajectories of Human Experience – Chapter 3 - The Magic of Metaphors: How Our Minds Make the World – Chapter 4 - Unpacking the “Black Box” of Conscious Interiority Part One - Space: Hollowing Out the Person – Chapter 5 - Envisioning the Invisible: Spatializing the Soul – Chapter 6 - Invoking Introspectable Worlds – Chapter 7 - The Collapse of Premodern Cosmology Part Two - Psyche: The Origins of Scientific Psychology – Chapter 8 - The Foundations of the Modern Study of Mind – Chapter 9 - The Great Cosmic Split: Dualism – Chapter 10 - Reactions to the Cartesian Split – Chapter 11 - Early Psychology: Making Visible the Contents of the Soul Part Three - Time: Modern Millenarianism and Politics as “Progress” – Chapter 12 - Meta-Framing Time: The Invention of History – Chapter 13 - Liberating the Psyche: The Emerging Faith in Progress – Chapter 14 - The History of Humankind: Climbing the Ladder of Civilization – Chapter 15 - Envisaging the Future as Paradise Part Four - Self: Turning the World Inside Out – Chapter 16 - The Changeable Self through the Centuries – Chapter 17 - The Narratized Individual as Social Actor – Chapter 18 - The Self as Mirror in Historical Perspective – Chapter 19 - The Birth of Modern Psychology Epilogue - Visualizing New Vistas of Modernity and Selfhood – Chapter 20 - The Therapeutic Turn – Chapter 21 - Self-Idolatry: The Dark Side of the Psychotherapeutic Society – Chapter 22 - Modern Spatiality, the Soul, and the Psyche Appendix A: How to Open the “Black Box”: Cultural Psychology Appendix B: What Conscious Interiority Is Not Appendix C: Spaces: Real and Imaginary Appendix D: The Visible, Invisible, and Introspectable References Index About the Author

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