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Informationen zum Autor Isaac E. Catt is visiting scholar in philosophy of communication at Duquesne University. Klappentext In this book, a synthesis of philosophical anthropology in Plessner and Bourdieu is employed to critique scientific reductionism in psychiatry and to replace a disembodied medicalized image of humans with a constructive image of being human in communication. Zusammenfassung In this book, a synthesis of philosophical anthropology in Plessner and Bourdieu is employed to critique scientific reductionism in psychiatry and to replace a disembodied medicalized image of humans with a constructive image of being human in communication. Inhaltsverzeichnis Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: Disembodied Images of the Human Person Chapter 1: Problematics of Communication in Signifying the Human Person Chapter 2: A Crisis of Communication in the Human Sciences Then and Now Chapter 3: Where It Hurts: Pathologizing Everyday Life in Psychocentric Culture Part Two: Embodied Images of the Human Person Chapter 4: Helmuth Plessner's Image of Embodied Communication Chapter 5: Constructing a New Image of the Human Person: Bourdieu and Plessner on Psychological Precarity Chapter 6: Being Human in Communication Bibliography About the Author
List of contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: Disembodied Images of the Human Person
Chapter 1: Problematics of Communication in Signifying the Human Person
Chapter 2: A Crisis of Communication in the Human Sciences Then and Now
Chapter 3: Where It Hurts: Pathologizing Everyday Life in Psychocentric Culture
Part Two: Embodied Images of the Human Person
Chapter 4: Helmuth Plessner's Image of Embodied Communication
Chapter 5: Constructing a New Image of the Human Person: Bourdieu and Plessner on Psychological Precarity
Chapter 6: Being Human in Communication
Bibliography
About the Author
About the author
Isaac E. Catt is visiting scholar in philosophy of communication at Duquesne University.