1st Edition

Psychological Metaphysics

By Peter A. White Copyright 1993
    340 Pages
    by Routledge

    340 Pages
    by Routledge

    The research literature on causal attribution and social cognition generally consists of many fascinating but fragmented and superficial phenomena. These can only be understood as an organised whole by elucidating the fundamental psychological assumptions on which they depend. Originally published in 1993, Psychological Metaphysics is an exploration of the most basic and important assumptions in the psychological construction of reality, with the aim of showing what they are, how they originate, and what they are there for.

    Peter A. White proposes that people basically understand causation in terms of stable, specific powers of things operating to produce effects under suitable conditions. This underpins an analysis of people’s understanding of causal processes in the physical word and of human action, which makes a radical break with the Heiderian tradition.

    Psychological Metaphysics suggests that causal attribution is in the service of the person’s practical concerns and any interest in accuracy or understanding is subservient to this. A notion of regularity in the world is of no more than minor importance in causal attribution, and social cognition is not so much a matter of cognitive mechanisms or processes but more of cultural ways of thinking imposed upon tacit, unquestioned, universal assumptions.

    Psychological Metaphysics incorporates not only research and theory in social cognition and developmental psychology, but also philosophy and the history of ideas. It will be challenging to everyone interested in how we try to understand the world.

    List of Figures and Tables.  Preface.  1. Introduction to Psychological Metaphysics  Part 1: General Psychological Metaphysics  2. Practical Concerns and Lay Judgement  3. The Nature of Basicity in the Psychological Construction of Reality  4. Foundations: Basic Categories and Basic Particulars  5. Why Regularity Information is Not Basic to Causal Understanding  6. The Causal Powers Theory of Causal Concepts  Part 2: Psychological Metaphysics of the Physical World  8. Fundamental Assumptions about the Nature of Order in the Physical World  9. Causal Relations in the Physical World  10. Causal Order in Nature  Part 3: Psychological Metaphysics of the Mind  11. The Concept of Action  12. Formation of Beliefs about the Mind  13. Implications of Research in Causal Attribution  14. The Battleground of the Mind  15. Judgement and Feelings.  Summary and Comments.  References.  Name Index.  Subject Index.

    Biography

    Peter A. White