[John Kirkland NZST 1946 23 June 2011]
I'm most appreciative of the various comments and suggestions offered
by several contributors. Thank you.
Bill, you may find there's PCT music embedded in Barresi's article as
it appears to resonate with several of your comments I've always
considered resonance as the first step in understanding music, but
that's an aside.
Dalhousie University ‑ Nova Scotia, Canada
Back in the early 1940's the philosopher Steven Pepper wrote a
marvellous little book, 'World hypotheses' where he articulated four
rational metaphors. That book is still in print, over half a century
later. His concept of 'contextualism' is well represented by James,
Bakhtin, Hermans, McAdams, Barresi, Vygotsky and so forth. As Michael
Cole has reminded interested listeners and readers often, psychology
took an interesting turn when it jettisoned one approach in favour of
another. Sound familiar?
Again, thanks for the comments. I'll mull them over some more.
···
On Wed, Jun 22, 2011 at 6:31 AM, Chad Green <Chad.Green@lcps.org> wrote:
[From Chad Green (2011.06.21.14:30 EDT)]
Fred, your conclusion perhaps aligns with the conceptual-act model of emotion:
Theory of constructed emotion - Wikipedia"According to the Conceptual-Act model, emotion is generated when a person categorizes his/her core affective state using knowledge about emotion. This theory combines elements of linguistic relativity and affective neuroscience."
Hence the importance of level 7 of HPCT as I have stated before on this list.
Cheers,
ChadChad Green, PMP
Program Analyst
Loudoun County Public Schools
21000 Education Court
Ashburn, VA 20148
Voice: 571-252-1486
Fax: 571-252-1633Fred Nickols <fred@NICKOLS.US> 6/20/2011 12:45 PM >>>
OK, OK; I get it. �I'm not controlling my behavior, I'm controlling my
perception of my behavior.Fred Nickols
-----Original Message-----
From: Control Systems Group Network (CSGnet)
[mailto:CSGNET@LISTSERV.ILLINOIS.EDU] On Behalf Of Bill Powers
Sent: Saturday, June 18, 2011 5:59 PM
To: CSGNET@LISTSERV.ILLINOIS.EDU
Subject: Re: The Control of Behavior[From Bill Powers (2011.06.18.1755 MDT)]
Fred Nickols (2011.06.18.1707 MDT) --
>FN: I perceive my mouth and tongue moving, I perceive sounds that seem
>to come from my mouth, I perceive some of those sounds as constituting
>words, I perceive some of those strings of words as constituting
>sentences, and my memory and grasp of the language tells me those are
"utterances."BP: OK, don't stop there. So if your behavior is known to you only as
perceptions, what is it you're controlling, again?Best,
Bill P.