Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

The Structure and Development of Self-Consciousness

Interdisciplinary perspectives

Edited by Dan Zahavi, Thor Grünbaum and Josef Parnas
Danish National Research Foundation, Center for Subjectivity Research

2004. xiv, 162 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5195 4 / EUR 95.00
978 1 58811 571 3 / USD 143.00
Add to shopping cart

e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9513 2 / EUR 95.00 / USD 143.00
Ordering information

Add to wish list

Self-consciousness is a topic of considerable importance to a variety of empirical and theoretical disciplines such as developmental and social psychology, cognitive neuroscience, psychiatry, and philosophy. This volume presents essays on self-consciousness by prominent psychologists, cognitive neurologists, and philosophers. Some of the topics included are the infants’ sense of self and others, theory of mind, phenomenology of embodiment, neural mechanisms of action attribution, and hermeneutics of the self. A number of these essays argue in turn that empirical findings in developmental psychology, phenomenological analyses of embodiment, or studies of pathological self-experiences point to the existence of a type of self-consciousness that does not require any explicit I —thought or self-observation, but is more adequately described as a pre-reflective, embodied form of self-familiarity. The different contributions in the volume amply demonstrate that self-consciousness is a complex multifaceted phenomenon that calls for an integration of different complementary interdisciplinary perspectives. (Series B)


Table of contents

Acknowledgments
vii
The ambiguity of self-consciousness: A preface
Thor Grünbaum and Dan Zahavi
ix
1. The emergence of self awareness as co-awareness in early child development
Philippe Rochat
1
2. Threesome intersubjectivity in infancy: A contribution to the development of self-awareness
Elisabeth Fivaz-Depeursinge, Nicolas Favez and France Frascarolo
21
3. The embodied self-awareness of the infant: A challenge to the theory of mind?
Dan Zahavi
35
4. From self-recognition to self-consciousness
Marc Jeannerod
65
5. Agency, ownership, and alien control in schizophrenia
Shaun Gallagher
89
6. Tetraplegia and self-consciousness
Jonathan Cole
105
7. Self and identity
Arne Grøn
123