The Externalization of Consciousness and the Psychopathology of Everyday Life
By (Author) Stephen T. Deberry
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
29th November 1990
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Philosophy of mind
153
Hardback
232
Are we oblivious to the wonders of human consciousness Stephen DeBerry suggests that we must reintegrate the concept of consciousness into mainstream psychology. He develops, from a general systems perspective, a model of consciousness which he uses to explore the effects of technology - the accelerated and pervasive television video universe - on the quality of our lives. What role has modern technology played in the shifting of human consciousness from intrapersonal and interpersonal dimensions to the predominantly impersonal dimension where only the material world matters The intent of this volume is to provoke questions and dialogue. A cross-disciplinary study of the relationship of human consciousness and cultural pathology and it is intended for anyone who "critically" thinks that life has more purpose than we allow it. DeBerry's book presents a new model of human consciousness. It also takes a penetrating look at one of the most serious cultural changes of contemporary life; the relationship of consciousness and technology. The first six chapters function as building blocks that construct DeBerry's model by exploring the use of scientific paradigms to study consciousness; by offering a scientific and philosophic background; by introducing a general systems theory; and by describing concepts of perspective and focus, time and space, values and reality assumptions, and language. Chapter seven demonstrates how "concept" distortions have "externalized consciousness". DeBerry's model is then related to issues of contemporary culture and community. Technology's contribution to distortions in consciousness is explored in chapter nine. The volume concludes with a discussion of the contemporary "psychopathology of everyday life". Intended for courses in graduate psychology, this volume's interdisciplinary perspective makes it equally relevant for courses in sociology, anthropology, humanistic philosophy, human studies and social ecology.
STEPHEN T. DEBERRY is an Assistant Clinical Professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and is also in private practice in Westchester County, New York. He has also authored several articles that have appeared in the American Journal of Psychotherapy, the Journal of Geriatric Psychology, and the Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy.