University Press of America
Pages: 284
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-0-7618-3524-0 • Paperback • October 2006 • $62.99 • (£48.00)
Graeme Donald Snooks is the Coghlan Research Professor in Australian National University's Institute of Advanced Studies. Dr. Snooks is an accomplished author at the cutting-edge of research on social and biological dynamics. His many published works include, The Collapse of Darwinism or the Rise of a Realist Theory of Life from Lexington Books, The Dynamic Society: Exploring the Sources of Global Change, The Ephemeral Civilization: Exploding the Myth of Social Evolution, and The Laws of History.
Part 1 Figures
Part 2 Tables
Part 3 Preface
Chapter 4 1. Unraveling the Mysteries of the Mind
Part 5 Part I. The Biology of Selfcreation
Chapter 6 2. A New Theory of Life
Chapter 7 3. Selection is Strategic, Not Natural
Part 8 Part II. Human Nature
Chapter 9 4. Man's Biological Dilemma
Chapter 10 5. Strategic Desire and the Instincts
Chapter 11 6. The Strategic Nature of Emotions
Chapter 12 7. Orthodox Approaches to Human Nature
Part 13 Part III. The Mind that Created Itself
Chapter 14 8. The Strategic Brain
Chapter 15 9. Consciousness—The Metropolis of the Mind
Chapter 16 10. Orthodox Approaches to the Mind
Part 17 Part IV. A Strategic Psychology
Chapter 18 11. A New Psychology
Chapter 19 12. A Strategic Psychiatry
Chapter 20 13. Orthodox Approaches to Psychiatry
Part 21 Part V. The Future of the Mind
Chapter 22 14. A Strategic or Metaphysical Brain?
Part 23 Notes
Part 24 Glossary of New Terms and Concepts
Part 25 References
Part 26 Index
Part 27 About the Author
At the forefront of the recent efflorescence of research on 'big theory' and 'big history' is Graeme Snooks…[His] corpus of work is an impressive achievement…that is beginning to gain notice across a variety of disciplines…This is as bold a project as could be conceived: 'big theory writ large.'
— Gary Magee; Social Evolution and History
The Selfcreating Mind is a highly original and bold examination of the emergence, role, function, and malfunction of the human mind. Professor Snooks achieves this by employing his critically acclaimed 'dynamic-strategy theory,' which has transformed the way we view the dynamics of life and human society. This book's novel perspective is likely to stimulate a new research program in the cognitive sciences.
— Akop Nazaretyan, Psychology Faculty, Moscow State University