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Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept

Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior

"Schwartz’s Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept makes me want to sing and dance for joy. A student of Ossorio’s has developed the presentational skills to communicate the power and beauty of The Person Concept in all its complexity and rigor. He writes as only a good teacher can with metaphors, case examples, and appreciation of the historical and philosophical antecedents of this wonderfully complex set of conceptual distinctions. Schwartz writes well because he uses the fitting story or example to make the concepts come alive.If one studies the system, it can change one’s life. It changed mine. As a well-trained experimental social psychologist, I arrived at the University of Colorado in 1961and shared an office with Ossorio. We would debate issues, and I came to see that he had something genuinely revolutionary to offer. My thinking about persons was no longer trapped in a causal-deterministic framework that did not do justice to persons and their behavior. I now had concepts that allowed a systematic analysis of personal agency and human freedom of choice. Enjoy this wonderful book!" --Keith Davis. Ph.D., Distinguished Professor Emeritus and former Chairman of the Department of Psychology at the University of South Carolina "A colleague of mine, when the subject of Descriptive Psychology ("DP") came up at a recent conference, informed me that a fellow attendee quipped that it was "psychology's best kept secret". Created by Peter Ossorio, and applied by him to topics as far ranging as artificial intelligence software for NASA, the nature of emotion, and the practice of psychotherapy, DP has somehow managed to escape the significant notice within psychology that this most innovative and ingenious approach deserves. Hopefully, Dr. Schwartz's book will serve to change this situation. Written by one of DP's foremost exponents, Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept sets forth the key concepts of DP in an accessible and reader-friendly fashion. Along the way, Dr. Schwartz clarifies these concepts by providing numerous interesting applications (e.g., to topics of empathy, emotional competence, and theory of mind) that illustrate DP's many uses in an engaging way. I highly recommend this book to any person interested in exploring new, powerful, and different ideas in the fields of psychological science, psychopathology, and/or psychotherapy." --Raymond M. Bergner, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychology, Illinois State University, author of: Pathological self-criticism: Assessment and treatment. (Springer Publishing) "This is the "fresh start" that the father of DP had in mind and that Wynn Schwartz has brought to fruition in his new and important book. In it you will find the toolbox of parametric analysis, of paradigm case formulation, of maxims for behavior description. The methodological model of the actor observer critic for doing such work of description and a companion model of negotiation of differences in the descriptions generated by different observers are additional crucial tools of the work of behavioral science. These tools and models and many more await you in these pages and will serve as an induction or a training in the pre-empirical map psychologists could share to gain unity, homogeneity, and consistency in the research products generated. Nothing short of a rebirth of psychology is intimated here. Systematic and coherent, bringing the fundamental concepts of its subject matter to bear, this becomes the raison d’être of any of its empirical investigations and research. No longer just an armchair discipline still aligned with philosophy or the diverse scholarship of the liberal arts, nor an imitation of the natural sciences, a discipline aping experimental studies akin to chemistry or biology, psychology is the science of the observation and description of behavior. DP instead advocates for the observation and description of behavior in progress and makes this descriptive work the foundation of an autonomous and properly behavioral science. This is psychology finding and realizing itself and instituting what its research program really should be about. Knowing what’s in this book will empower all future psychologists in their future work whether clinical in nature or in research in an empirical vain. Without pretension or even a hint of grandiosity, Wynn Schwartz has brought us just such a new beginning. So humble and down to earth you just might miss how brilliant and what a truly remarkable work this book is. Do not let that happen. Everyone in our field should put it right at the top of their reading list." --(2021, December 20). Review of Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept, Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior. The Humanistic Psychologist. Advance online publication. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/hum0000264

Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept maps the common ground of behavioral science. The absence of a shared foundation has given us fragmentation, a siloed state of psychological theory and practice. Les mer

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Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept maps the common ground of behavioral science. The absence of a shared foundation has given us fragmentation, a siloed state of psychological theory and practice. And the science? The integrity of choice, accountability, reason, and intention are necessary commitments at the cornerstone of civilization and any person-centered psychotherapy, but when taught along with a “scientific” requirement for reductionism and determinism, reside in contradictory intellectual universes. Peter Ossorio developed the Person Concept to remedy these problems. This book is an introduction to his work and the community of scientists, scholars, and practitioners of Descriptive Psychology.

Ossorio offered these maxims that capture the discipline’s spirit:1. The world makes sense, and so do people. They make sense to begin with.2. It’s one world. Everything fits together. Everything is related to everything else.3. Things are what they are and not something else instead.4. Don’t count on the world being simpler than it has to be.

The Person Concept is a single, coherent concept of interdependent component concepts: Individual Persons; Behavior as Intentional Action; Language and Verbal Behavior; Community and Culture; and World and Reality.

Descriptive Psychology uses preempirical, theory-neutral formulations and methods, to make explicit the implicit structure of the behavioral sciences. The goal is a framework with a place for what is already known with room for what is yet to be found.

Detaljer

Forlag
Academic Press Inc
Innbinding
Paperback
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780128139851
Utgivelsesår
2019
Format
23 x 15 cm

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"Schwartz’s Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept makes me want to sing and dance for joy. A student of Ossorio’s has developed the presentational skills to communicate the power and beauty of The Person Concept in all its complexity and rigor. He writes as only a good teacher can with metaphors, case examples, and appreciation of the historical and philosophical antecedents of this wonderfully complex set of conceptual distinctions. Schwartz writes well because he uses the fitting story or example to make the concepts come alive.If one studies the system, it can change one’s life. It changed mine. As a well-trained experimental social psychologist, I arrived at the University of Colorado in 1961and shared an office with Ossorio. We would debate issues, and I came to see that he had something genuinely revolutionary to offer. My thinking about persons was no longer trapped in a causal-deterministic framework that did not do justice to persons and their behavior. I now had concepts that allowed a systematic analysis of personal agency and human freedom of choice. Enjoy this wonderful book!" --Keith Davis. Ph.D., Distinguished Professor Emeritus and former Chairman of the Department of Psychology at the University of South Carolina "A colleague of mine, when the subject of Descriptive Psychology ("DP") came up at a recent conference, informed me that a fellow attendee quipped that it was "psychology's best kept secret". Created by Peter Ossorio, and applied by him to topics as far ranging as artificial intelligence software for NASA, the nature of emotion, and the practice of psychotherapy, DP has somehow managed to escape the significant notice within psychology that this most innovative and ingenious approach deserves. Hopefully, Dr. Schwartz's book will serve to change this situation. Written by one of DP's foremost exponents, Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept sets forth the key concepts of DP in an accessible and reader-friendly fashion. Along the way, Dr. Schwartz clarifies these concepts by providing numerous interesting applications (e.g., to topics of empathy, emotional competence, and theory of mind) that illustrate DP's many uses in an engaging way. I highly recommend this book to any person interested in exploring new, powerful, and different ideas in the fields of psychological science, psychopathology, and/or psychotherapy." --Raymond M. Bergner, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychology, Illinois State University, author of: Pathological self-criticism: Assessment and treatment. (Springer Publishing) "This is the "fresh start" that the father of DP had in mind and that Wynn Schwartz has brought to fruition in his new and important book. In it you will find the toolbox of parametric analysis, of paradigm case formulation, of maxims for behavior description. The methodological model of the actor observer critic for doing such work of description and a companion model of negotiation of differences in the descriptions generated by different observers are additional crucial tools of the work of behavioral science. These tools and models and many more await you in these pages and will serve as an induction or a training in the pre-empirical map psychologists could share to gain unity, homogeneity, and consistency in the research products generated. Nothing short of a rebirth of psychology is intimated here. Systematic and coherent, bringing the fundamental concepts of its subject matter to bear, this becomes the raison d’être of any of its empirical investigations and research. No longer just an armchair discipline still aligned with philosophy or the diverse scholarship of the liberal arts, nor an imitation of the natural sciences, a discipline aping experimental studies akin to chemistry or biology, psychology is the science of the observation and description of behavior. DP instead advocates for the observation and description of behavior in progress and makes this descriptive work the foundation of an autonomous and properly behavioral science. This is psychology finding and realizing itself and instituting what its research program really should be about. Knowing what’s in this book will empower all future psychologists in their future work whether clinical in nature or in research in an empirical vain. Without pretension or even a hint of grandiosity, Wynn Schwartz has brought us just such a new beginning. So humble and down to earth you just might miss how brilliant and what a truly remarkable work this book is. Do not let that happen. Everyone in our field should put it right at the top of their reading list." --(2021, December 20). Review of Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept, Essential Attributes of Persons and Behavior. The Humanistic Psychologist. Advance online publication. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/hum0000264

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