ABSTRACT

Examining the Psychological Foundations of Science and Morality is a progressive text that explores the relationship between psychology, science and morality, to address fundamental questions about the foundations of psychological research and its relevance for the development of these disciplines.

Supported by original empirical evidence, the book analyses the relationship of folk psychology to rational knowledge, outlining an original theory that connects psychology and natural sciences through the mind which creates a psychological foundation for scientific knowledge and morality. It argues that science and religion have a common psychological core of subjective experience, which diversifies into knowledge, beliefs and morality. The book considers how subjective space and time are converted into physical space and time, and how subjective ‘sense of causation’ is shaped into physical causality and human communication. Further, it explores the mind as a complex system of contrasting realities, with the main function being existence attribution (EXON). The chapters delve into a range of topics including theoretical analysis of consciousness, the internal self, unexplainable phenomena, analysis of empirical research into causality, morality and the mind.

The book will be of great interest to postgraduate and upper-level undergraduate students studying foundations of psychology, consciousness, philosophy of science, morality, as well as professionals who deal with influence on mass consciousness or are interested in the link between human psychology, scientific knowledge and morality.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|52 pages

The Inexplicable

chapter 1|9 pages

The Inexplicable

chapter 2|20 pages

Consciousness as the Inexplicable

chapter 3|9 pages

Observing the Inexplicable

chapter 4|6 pages

From observed to the observer

Internal self as the Unknowable

chapter 5|6 pages

Gods, Self and science

part II|72 pages

The Inexplicable

chapter 6|16 pages

Studying the Inexplicable

Space and time

chapter 7|27 pages

Causality

Logic of science and logic of the mind

chapter 8|27 pages

Explaining morality

part III|36 pages

The Inexplicable

chapter 9|30 pages

Mind as a phenomenon

The Inexplicable as a whole

chapter 10|4 pages

The conclusion

Soft sciences reconsidered