000 02771nam a2200205Ia 4500
999 _c185112
_d185112
020 _a0226516687
040 _cCUS
082 _a302.05
_bMEA/M
100 _aMead, George H.
_912858
245 0 _aMind, self, and society : from the standpoint of a social behaviorist/
_cGeorge H. Mead, edited by Charles W. Morris
260 _aLondon :
_bUnivesity of Chicago Press,
_c1967.
300 _a1v. (xxxvii,400p.) :
_c21cm.
504 _aContains bibliography. Includes index.
505 _aPart I. The Point of View of Social Behaviorism 1. Social Psychology and Behaviorism 2. The Behavioristic Significance of Attitudes 3. The Behavioristic Significance of Gestures 4. Rise of Parallelism in Psychology 5. Parallelism and the Ambiguity of "Consciousness" 6. The Program of Behaviorism Part II. Mind 7. Wundt and the Concept of the Gesture 8. Imitation and the Origin of Language 9. The Vocal Gesture and the Significant Symbol 10. Thought, Communication, and the Significant Symbol 11. Meaning 12. Universality 13. The Nature of Reflective Intelligence 14. Behaviorism, Watsonism, and Reflection 15. Behaviorism and Psychological Parallelism 16. Mind and the Symbol 17. The Relation of Mind to Response and Environment Part III. The Self 18. The Self and the Organism 19. The Background of the Genesis of the Self 20. Play, the Game, and the Generalized Other 21. The Self and the Subjective 22. The "I" and the "Me" 23. Social Attitudes and the Physical World 24. Mind as the Individual Importation of the Social Process 25. The "I" and the "Me" as Phases of the Self 26. The Realization of the Self in the Social Situation 27. The Contributions of the "Me" and the "I" 28. The Social Creativity of the Emergent Self 29. A Contrast of Individualistic and Social Theories of the Self Part IV. Society 30. The Basis of Human Society: Man and the Insects 31. The Basis of Human Society: Man and the Vertebrates 32. Organism, Community, and Environment 33. The Social Foundations and Functions of Thought and Communication 34. The Community and the Institution 35. The Fusion of the "I" and the "Me" in Social Activities 36. Democracy and Universality in Society 37. Further Consideration of Religious and Economic Attitudes 38. The Nature of Sympathy 39. Conflict and Integration 40. The Functions of Personality and Reason in Social Organization 41. Obstacles and Promises in the Development of the Ideal Society 42. Summary and Conclusion Supplementary Essays I. The Function of Imagery in Conduct II. The Biologic Individual III. The Self and the Process of Reflection IV. Fragments on Ethics
650 _aSocial psychology.
_93956
650 _aBehaviorism.
_912859
650 _aPragmatism.
_912860
700 _aMorris, Charles W. ed.
_912861
942 _cWB16
_04