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Hobbes to Hume

Wadsworth Publishing Company (1969)

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  1. Living a lie: Self-deception, habit, and social roles. [REVIEW]Jeff Mitchell - 2000 - Human Studies 23 (2):145-156.
    In this paper I give an account of self-deception by situating it within the theory of human conduct advanced by American pragmatists John Dewey and George Herbert Mead. After examining and rejecting the two most prevalent explanations of self-deception - namely, Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic interpretation and Jean-Paul Sartre's phenomenological one - I provide a brief sketch of some of Dewey's and Mead's fundamental insights into the inherently social nature of mind.I argue that one of the main forms of self-deception involves (...)
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  • Addressing the Quantitative and Qualitative: A View to Complementarity—From the Synaptic to the Social.James Giordano, P. Justin Rossi & Roland Benedikter - 2013 - Open Journal of Philosophy 3 (4):1.
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  • Naturalistic and Supernaturalistic Disclosures: The Possibility of Relational Miracles.Amy Fisher Smith - 2010 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 10 (2):1-13.
    This paper explores naturalism and supernaturalism as modes of disclosure that reveal and conceal different aspects of relationality. Naturalism is presented as a worldview or set of philosophical assumptions that posits an objective world that is separable from persons and discoverable or describable via scientific methods. Because psychotherapy tacitly endorses many naturalistic assumptions, psychotherapy relationships may be limited to an instrumentalist ethic premised upon use-value and manipulability. Given these naturalistic limitations, relationships may require a supernatural component – a component which (...)
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