ABSTRACT

In this incisive study of the biological and cultural origins of the human self, the author challenges readers to re-think ideas about the self and consciousness as being exclusive to humans. In their place, he expounds a metatheoretical approach to the self as a purposeful system of extended cognition common to animal life: the invisible medium maintaining mind, body and environment as an integrated ‘field of being’.

Supported by recent research in evolutionary and developmental studies together with related discoveries in animal behaviour and the neurosciences, the author examines the factors that have shaped the evolution of the animal self across widely different species and times, through to the modern, technologically enmeshed human self; the differences between which, he contends, are relations of degree rather than absolute differences. We are, he concludes, instinctive and ‘fuzzy individuals’ clinging to fragile identities in an artificial and volatile world of humanity’s own making, but which we now struggle to control.

This book, which restores the self to its fundamental place in identity formation, will be of great interest for students and academics in the fields of social, developmental and environmental psychology, together with readers from other disciplines in the humanities, especially philosophy, cultural theory and architecture.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

The background

chapter Chapter 1|11 pages

The nature–nurture debate

chapter Chapter 2|17 pages

Inheritance systems

part II|2 pages

The metatheory

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Self-organisation

chapter Chapter 4|20 pages

The invisible self

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Mapping the field

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

The evolving self

chapter Chapter 7|14 pages

Tacit nexus

part III|2 pages

The self in the world

chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

Technically extended selves

chapter Chapter 9|20 pages

Self-images

chapter Chapter 10|10 pages

Self and group identity

chapter Chapter 11|12 pages

Occupational identity

chapter Chapter 12|11 pages

Selves online

chapter Chapter 13|12 pages

Transformations

chapter Chapter 14|16 pages

Loss of the private self

part IV|2 pages

Summation

chapter Chapter 15|15 pages

Instinctive and fuzzy selves

chapter |3 pages

Pandemic postscript