Results 241 to 250 of about 735,740 (305)
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2010
Our conscious control of language and its acquisition is strictly limited. A processing-oriented perspective to explain this will be outlined called MOGUL according to which some linguistic processes are inherently unconscious while others can be either conscious or not.
Michael Sharwood Smith, John Truscott
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Our conscious control of language and its acquisition is strictly limited. A processing-oriented perspective to explain this will be outlined called MOGUL according to which some linguistic processes are inherently unconscious while others can be either conscious or not.
Michael Sharwood Smith, John Truscott
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Consciousness, Language, and Self
European Journal of Psychotherapy & Counselling, 2020“Who we think we are, who others think we are, and who we think others are, the relationship of self and world, can be very confusing.
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2000
In this brief extract, from The Explicit Animal (1991, 1999), Tallis considers why attempts to naturalise language won’t do. Behaviourists like B.F. Skinner have tried to see language as a form of communication that is essentially the same as that taking place between animals.
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In this brief extract, from The Explicit Animal (1991, 1999), Tallis considers why attempts to naturalise language won’t do. Behaviourists like B.F. Skinner have tried to see language as a form of communication that is essentially the same as that taking place between animals.
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Language, Consciousness, and Memory
1990This chapter provides a behavioral overview of language and of two language-related topics: consciousness and memory. Because these topics have been favorites of cognitive psychologists, a cognitive view of each is also briefly considered.
Alan Poling +3 more
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Language, Consciousness, Culture
2007An integrative approach to human cognition that encompasses the domains of language, consciousness, action, social cognition, and theory of mind that will foster cross-disciplinary conversation among linguists, philosophers, psycholinguists, neuroscientists, cognitive anthropologists, and evolutionary psychologists.
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Values, Consciousness, and Language
Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 2002Two seminal thinkers, Edelman and Damasio, offer neurophysiological models of brain development and functioning that correspond with a contemporary psychoanalytic focus on dynamic experiential intersubjective systems. I describe their respective contributions under three headings derived from Edelman: values, consciousness, and language. I consider the
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Narrating consciousness: Language, media and embodiment
History of the Human Sciences, 2010Although there has long been a division in studies of consciousness between a focus on neuronal processes or conversely an emphasis on the ruminations of a conscious self, the long-standing split between mechanism and meaning within the brain was mirrored by a split without, between information as a technical term and the meanings that messages are ...
N Katherine, Hayles, James J, Pulizzi
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Phenomenal consciousness and language
2000In the present chapter I shall argue that the simple form of dispositionalist higher-order thought (HOT) theory of phenomenal consciousness defended in chapters 8 and 9 is preferable to three other similar but more elaborate accounts (put forward by Carruthers, 1996a; Dennett, 1978; and Dennett, 1991 respectively).
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Language and Revolutionary Consciousness
2002Abstract From the outset, ‘spirit’ is cursed with the ‘burden’ of matter, which appears in this case in the form of agitated layers of air, sounds, in short, of language. Language is as old as consciousness, language is practical consciousness, as it exists for other men, and thus as it really exists for myself as well.
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