Description
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- Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept: Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1: What Is Descriptive Psychology and The Person Concept?
- Let’s Start With “People Make Sense”
- A Few Remarks on Science and What a Science of Persons Should Respect
- The Descriptive Maxims: Behavioral Logic and Some Reminders for Well-formed Descriptions
- The Original Nine Maxims
- Chapter 2: Individual Persons, Personhood, and the Problem of Definition
- Paradigm Case Formulations
- PCF of Family
- Three Definitions and a Paradigm Case Formulation of Persons
- A Paradigm Case Formulation of a Person
- Deliberate Actions and Intrinsic Motivation
- What About Language and Verbal Behavior?
- Individual Differences and Person Characteristics
- Powers
- Abilities, Competence, and Skill
- Knowledge
- Values
- Dispositions
- Additional Individual Difference and Personal Characteristic Categories
- States
- Capacities
- Embodiment
- Some Embodiment Theory
- Through-lines and the Dramaturgical Pattern
- Examples of Through-lines
- Nonhuman Through-lines
- Through-lines and Dogs—The Significance in Dog Psychology
- Some Limitations to a Dog’s Through-lines
- Some Implications
- What About Other Animals?
- Some Ethics About the Uncertainty of Personhood—Another Value Judgment Will Follow
- Chapter 3: Behavior as Intentional Action
- Some Quibbling about Conceptualization and Theory
- Some Action Vocabulary
- Intentionality, Back Where It Belongs
- What About Robots?
- Observation, Performance, Meaning, and Significance and Some Preliminary Connections to Verbal Behav
- We Need a Common Lexicon
- At Last! The Parametric Analysis
- The Formulation of Intentional Action
- The Parametric Analysis of Intentional Action
- Identity (I)
- Wants (W)
- Some Thoughts on Empirically Identifying or Interpreting Wants and Motivations
- Knows (K)
- Know How (KH)
- Some Issues Attending Know How Deficits
- Performance (P) and Achievement (A)
- Significance (S)
- Significance, Implementation of Significance (Performance), and Some Thoughts About Psychotherapy
- Some Examples and Dilemmas of Significance to the Actor and the Observer
- Personal Characteristics (PC)
- A Brief Summary and Some Practical Questions for Structured Interviews
- Some Notational Devices: The Intentional Action Diamond, Agency Descriptions, and Self-regulation
- The Actor-Observer-Critic Model of Self-regulation and the Dramaturgical Pattern
- The Actor and the Drama (All the World’s a Stage)
- Authenticity and the Actor
- The Observer-Describer
- The Critic
- Appraisals, Final-Order Appraisals (FOAs), and Altered States of Consciousness
- Hypnosis as a Test Case
- Back to the AOC Feedback Loop
- Chapter 4: The Judgment Diagram, Some Categories of Cognizance, and the Unconscious
- A Distressing Example and Some Grouping of Reasons
- The Overall Observed Circumstance
- The Teacher’s Relevant Circumstances (c) and Personal Characteristics (Weighted Values)
- Decision and Behavior
- The Judgment Diagram Modified for Problems in Social and Self-regulation
- A Theory-Neutral “Psychodynamic” Judgment Diagram
- A Three Domain Judgment Diagram Designed for Actor-Observer-Critic Self-regulation Assessment
- Domain One: Aspects of Circumstances the Actor Easily Recognizes, Ones Where the Actor Might Reassig
- Domain Two: Aspects of Circumstances and Reasons only Reluctantly Recognized as Personally Significa
- Domain Three: Aspects of Circumstances and Reasons so Unthinkable or Intolerable, the Actor Is Unabl
- The Decision and Observed Behavior
- Implications and Stray Thoughts
- The Case of Tommy
- About Ambivalence and Conflict
- Some Content and Behavioral Logic of the Three Domains
- Domain One: The World of Easy Awareness
- Three Circumstances of Domain One
- Circumstance One
- Circumstance Two
- Circumstance Three
- Examples of Circumstances One, Two, and Three Within Domain One
- Back to the Three Domain Judgment Diagram and Features of Domains Two and Three
- Domain Two and Three Are “Triggered”
- Empirically Speaking, What Do People Tend to Avoid and Disown?
- Domain Two: Reluctance, Bad Faith, and Self-deception
- Domain Three: Impossible and Intolerable Circumstances
- The Logical Structure of Defensive Distortion (Adapted from Peter Ossorio’s Persons, 1995)
- The Unthinkability Model
- Conclusions
- Implications
- Transference and Resistance Can Be Features of Both the Unthinkability and the Insistence Model
- The Insistence Model
- An Example and Some Clinical Implications
- Demystifying Projective Identification
- Interpretation, Redescription, and a Version of Cognitive Behavior Therapy
- On the Interpretation of Unconscious Action and Self-deception
- Chapter 5: Relationships, the Relationship Formula, and Emotional Competence
- What Are Relationships?
- The Relationship Formula
- The Relationship Change Formula
- Emotional Behavior
- Shared and Observable Relations Are Required for Naming Emotions (Sensations Won’t Do)
- Fear in Action
- What About Love?
- Steps Toward a Theory of Emotional Competence
- How Is Emotional Competence Facilitated?
- Emotional Competence and Related Themes
- Anxiety, Depression, and Overwhelming Sensation
- Chapter 6: Verbal Behavior, Language, and Linguistic Self-Regulation
- Ossorio’s Formulation
- Verbal Behavior Is Our Defining Social Practice and How I Earn My Keep
- What Is the Function of Language and the Status of the Speaker?
- Formal Aspects of the Place of Language and Verbal Behavior in the Person Concept
- The Descriptive Account of Verbal Behavior Is Preempirical
- Forms of Life, Social Practices, and Some More Wittgenstein
- Chapter 7: Community and Culture
- Community and Culture
- The Fifth Major Piece of the Person Concept
- The Concepts of Community and Culture
- Members
- Social Practices
- Statuses
- Concepts
- Locutions
- Choice Principles and Policies
- World
- Culture as a Special Sort of Community
- World
- Members
- Statuses
- Language
- Institutional Social Practices
- Choice Principles, Policies, and Values
- Some Behavioral Logic and Some Dilemmas: More Maxims
- Degradation, Accreditation, and Rites of Passage: Gains and Loss of Standing
- Some Effects of Degradation
- The Degraded Have Reason to React against the Community
- The Ceremony Can Be Accepted as the Natural Order of Things (or as Having Already Happened)
- Indoctrination and Degradation
- Microaggressions
- General Considerations for Undoing Degradation
- Accreditation Ceremonies, Psychotherapy, and Values
- Chapter 8: Reality and the Worlds
- Persons and the Elements of the World
- What Are the Elements of the World?
- State of Affairs System Transition Rules
- World Construction: The World Found Is the One Created
- A Person’s Place in the World Provides Behavior Potential
- Consciousness, Final-Order Appraisals, and World Maintenance
- Consciousness, Imagination, and the Opportunity of the Dream World
- World’s Change: Reconstruction of Worlds and Cultures
- Loss, Mourning, and Reconstruction
- Cultural and World Transformation and Reconstruction
- Trauma, Resilience, and World Reconstruction
- Monday April 15, 2013, Marathon Day
- Restoration Is Participation
- Chapter 9: Empathy in Practice: A Demonstration of Some Person Concepts
- What Do People Mean by Empathy?
- Theory of Mind
- Mirror Neurons
- How Is Empathy Described in the Work of Major Psychotherapy Theorists?
- A Very Brief History of the Concept of Empathy
- A Practical Example From Therapy
- Tommy Revisited
- Empathy and Empathic Action
- Empathy, Paradigm Case Formulation, Paradigmatic Social Practices Formulation, and Parametric Analys
- A PSPF of Empathic Action
- A PSPF Formulation of Empathy as Empathic Action
- Transformations
- An Example and a PA
- A Practical Checklist of Empathy Reminders
- The IA Parameters and Some Reminders for Psychotherapy
- Identity
- Wants and Values
- Knowledge and Knowing
- Know How and Toleration
- Significance, Through-lines, Accreditation, Degradation, and the Development of Character
- Personal Characteristics
- Afterword and Summary: Satisfaction and the Construction of Worlds or, At the End of the Day, How Do
- Appendix One: Ossorio’s Status Dynamic Maxims, Behavioral Logic, and Reminders for Proper Descript
- Appendix Two: A Glossary of Descriptive Psychology Concepts Compiled by Clarke Stone
- References
- Index
- Back Cover
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