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The Evolved Self

Mapping an Understanding of Who We Are

Lloyd Hawkeye Robertson

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Hardback

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English
University of Ottawa Press
23 November 2020
"There is a self-help industry built on the notion of becoming the person ""we were meant to be,"" but what is the self at the core of such striving?

The Evolved Self: Mapping an Understanding of Who We Are answers this fundamental question by drawing on philosophy, psychology, various cultural traditions, and original research. The resultant method of mapping the self may revolutionize psychotherapy. The self, which is core to such concepts as self-esteem and self-actualization, is mapped using elemental units of culture called memes. To understand this self, we draw on Western philosophy, major schools of psychology, and the cross-cultural experience of the self in both collectivist and individualist cultures. With this grounding a diverse sample of eleven selves representing three genders are mapped, analyzed, and grouped in the following clusters:

1) North American selves built through participation in sports;

2) Selves centred on notions of North American aboriginality; 3) Selves of individuals following a secular humanist paradigm; and

4) Selves from China and Russia.

Two methods of self-mapping are described. The results support a hypothesis that a healthy or functional self is composed of fundamental elements including constancy, volition, uniqueness, productivity, intimacy, and social interest. The application of this research and the method of self-mapping to counselling and psychotherapy are explored. A disciplinary paradigm is proposed uniting major schools of psychotherapy. This work will be of interest to philosophers, psychologists, social workers, sociologists and all who have wondered how they come to define themselves in the ways that they do."
By:  
Imprint:   University of Ottawa Press
Country of Publication:   Canada
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   430g
ISBN:   9780776629346
ISBN 10:   0776629344
Series:   Health and Society
Pages:   302
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
List of Figures List of Tables   1. Necessity and Invention in Counselling Mapping and Modifying the Self of a Client in Therapy The Call of This Research   2. The Self Within Euro-American Thought The Unitary Stable Self Neurological Considerations in Understanding Self The Constructed Self: Variations on a Theme Social Constructionism and the Postmodern Alternative Considerations of the Objective and Subjective   3. The Self in Collectivist Cultures Grammar and Cultural Appropriation in Selected Amerindian Cultures The Buddhist Experience of Self Examinations of the Self in Selected Collectivist Cultures Counselling Outside of the “Western” Tradition   4. The Potential of the Meme The Meme “Meme” Defining the Meme Using Selected Studies An Evolutionary Account of the Self as a Complex of Memes The Implicit Self Made Explicit   5. Mapping the Self from Personal Narratives Finding One’s Self through Sports From Criminal to Counsellor Athlete via Wheelchair Environmentalism and Competence The Aboriginal Self “Against the Wind” White Renegade A Métis Mother The Humanist Self Not Métis, not Humanist Judge, Jury, and Executioner Born in the Wrong Body Two Selves from Outside North America A Competitive Spirit I Am Robot   6. Memes, Themes, and Humanness The Cognitive View: The Objective and Subjective The Self as a Small-World Network Teaching Self: Family and Community Happiness, Transcendence, and the Evolution of Religion Affirming and Strengthening Our Understanding of Self   7. Implications of Self-Mapping for Psychological Practice Extending the Example of the Suicidal Youth Resonance, Transition, and Self Change Self-Map Co-construction in Effecting Therapeutic Change Culturally Inclusive Counselling: Implications of Self The Fourth Paradigm   References Index

Lloyd Hawkeye Robertson is Lead Psychologist, Collaborative Centre for Justice and Safety at the University of Regina, and holds a PhD in Counselling Psychology. He has had a private clinical practice for the past forty years. He has published on the structure of the self, the use of prior learning assessment in self-construction, self-mapping in therapy, memetic mutations in religious transmission, residential school syndrome as a form of post-traumatic stress disorder, free will and psychotherapy, mind viruses, and male stigma.

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