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E-grāmata: Imagination in the Western Psyche: From Ancient Greece to Modern Neuroscience [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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Imagination in the Western Psyche: From Ancient Greece to Modern Neuroscience offers a comprehensive treatment of the human imagination by integrating the rich discourse on imagination in the humanities with modern neuroscientific research. This book is the first to offer an integrated understanding of imagination from both a humanistic (i.e. historical, philosophical, cultural, depth psychological) and scientific perspective.

The book presents neurobiological accounts that align with prominent theories in Jungian and archetypal psychology and offers a window into the many ways imagination can be understood. It elaborates on the discourse on imagination in Western Civilization which goes back thousands of years. Chapters analyse how imagination has been considered throughout history and contrasts a modern neuroscientific approach which looks at imagination by studying its component parts without addressing the phenomenon in all its experiential richness and complexity. By bringing these two approaches together an account of the human imagination emerges that is grounded in scientific rigor without diminishing the fullness of human experience.

This book will appeal to academics, researchers and post-graduate students in the fields of analytical psychology, depth psychology, Jungian studies, and psychotherapy

Acknowledgments viii
PART I Introduction
1(38)
1 Chasing imagination
3(18)
Defining imagination
4(4)
Imagination and depth psychology
8(4)
The great divide
12(1)
Model agnosticism
13(5)
Overview
18(3)
2 Measuring the imaginal
21(18)
Scientific method
22(6)
Science and scientism
28(3)
Perils of reduction and promise of complexity
31(4)
Phenomenology and neuroscience
35(1)
Facing Proteus
36(3)
PART II Imagination as phenomenon
39(76)
3 A brief history of imagination: from prehistory to the Renaissance
41(21)
Phantasies of Ancient Greece
43(7)
The Judeo-Christian imagination: from to Imaginatio
50(6)
The Renaissance
56(6)
4 Imagination in modernity: from enlightenment to disenchantment
62(23)
The ascendance of reason
62(2)
The synthetic imagination of Kant
64(4)
The creative imagination of the Romantics
68(10)
The road to disenchantment: imagination in the twentieth century
78(7)
5 Imaginal psychology
85(30)
The birth of depth psychology: from Nietzsche to Freud
86(3)
The Jungian imagination
89(11)
James Hillman: advocate for the imaginal
100(15)
PART III The neuroscience of imagination
115(70)
6 Sense and image
117(23)
Sensation, perception, imagination
118(7)
Mental images
125(3)
Mental images and meaning
128(6)
From virtual reality to Anima Mundi
134(6)
7 Time and story
140(20)
The narrative dimension
140(11)
Imagining memory
151(8)
Story tellers
159(1)
8 Creativity and dream
160(25)
Creativity
160(13)
Dream
173(11)
Concluding remarks on the creative unconscious
184(1)
PART IV The imagination of neuroscience
185(57)
9 Imagination in science
187(20)
Types of imagination in science
188(2)
Creative imagination in scientific method
190(5)
The ontological imagination
195(12)
10 Neuroscience as story and myth
207(25)
Science and the bridge of fiction
211(2)
Science fictions in public discourse
213(4)
The human face of neuroscience
217(6)
Myths and metaphors of the brain
223(5)
Myths and mysteries of consciousness
228(4)
11 Conclusion: facing Proteus
232(10)
Seeking synthesis
233(2)
Concluding remarks in defense of science
235(3)
Sitting with the shapeshifter
238(4)
References 242(18)
Index 260
Jonathan Erickson, a writer and educator, holds a BA in English literature from UC Berkeley and a PhD in depth psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute, California, USA