ABSTRACT

There has recently been a flurry of theoretical activity in affective neuroscience and neuropsychoanalysis. This book argues that the ability to integrate biological and psychological levels of understanding is inhibited by two important issues. First is the assumption made by most theorists that physical and mental phenomena are essentially different ("the Hard Problem"). Second, is the ambiguity of the widely used "Affect Concept". Ideas about the autonomic nervous system are integrated with those from the author's previous text A Basic Theory of Neuropsychoanalysis. The Realization of Concepts is based on four key assumptions: (1) There is no "Hard Problem"; (2) Motivational theory and cognitive theory can be integrated to create more valid models of body, brain and mind interactions; (3) "Affect Concepts" are superfluous and work to inhibit theory integration; and, (4) Affect theory developed as a "compromise formation" in response to radical reductionism.

part II|48 pages

Part II

chapter 7|9 pages

Parasympathetic systems and affect theory

chapter 9|16 pages

Scientific concepts and human evolution

chapter 10|12 pages

Psychopathology

part |52 pages

Part III

chapter 12|10 pages

Authority, self-control, and metatheory

chapter 13|10 pages

Moving through space, time, and light

chapter |9 pages

L’esprit D’escalier

chapter |10 pages

Psychosomatics in religion and science