Psychological Perspectives on the Self, Volumes 1-4Jerry M. Suls Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1982 - 273 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 21
Page 14
... aware organisms can become the object of their own attention , they are aware of being aware . An organism that is aware of its own experience is in the intel- lectually unique position of being able to use its experience to model the ...
... aware organisms can become the object of their own attention , they are aware of being aware . An organism that is aware of its own experience is in the intel- lectually unique position of being able to use its experience to model the ...
Page 16
... aware of it . In effect they have been rendered mindless in the visual modality . Vision in such instances has been reduced to an unconscious sensation . As evidence that chimpanzees are aware of being aware and as a conse- quence can ...
... aware of it . In effect they have been rendered mindless in the visual modality . Vision in such instances has been reduced to an unconscious sensation . As evidence that chimpanzees are aware of being aware and as a conse- quence can ...
Page 22
... aware of what it is doing ? Either one is aware of being aware or unaware of being aware , and the latter is tantamount to being unconscious . The sleepwalker is sufficiently aware to avoid colliding with obstacles but is unaware of ...
... aware of what it is doing ? Either one is aware of being aware or unaware of being aware , and the latter is tantamount to being unconscious . The sleepwalker is sufficiently aware to avoid colliding with obstacles but is unaware of ...
Contents
SelfAwareness and the Emergence of Mind in Humans | 3 |
The SelfConcept and Other Daemons | 27 |
Origins of SelfKnowledge and Individual Differences in Early | 55 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
19th century ability adoles adolescence affect aggressive animals apes appear assessment attributions aware behavior beneffectance Child Development childhood chimpanzees cognitive competent domain concept construct Developmental Psychology differentiated discrepancy emergence emotional Epstein evidence example experience factors feelings findings Freud Gallup global self-worth gorillas grade Harter high self-worth human identified infants interpersonal Journal judgments knowledge Lacan learning Lewis & Brooks-Gunn low self-worth mark-directed marmosets measures mental mirror exposure mirror image mirror test mirror-image stimulation monkeys motivation object object permanence observed one's oneself orangutans parents perception person physical Piaget pigeons Press primates Primatology processes recognition reflection regard reinforcement relationship response rhesus monkeys role Rosenberg scores self-awareness self-concept self-esteem self-perceptions self-recognition self-serving bias self-system self-worth group sense siamese fighting fish Social Psychology specific structure success suggest theory tion University University of Denver visual whereas York young