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|a 155.2
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|a UAMI
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|a Edwardes, Martin P. J.,
|e author.
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|a The origins of self :
|b an anthropological perspective /
|c Martin P.J. Edwardes.
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|a London :
|b UCL Press,
|c 2019.
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|a 1 online resource (xviii, 230 pages) :
|b illustrations (black and white)
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|a text
|b txt
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|a computer
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|a online resource
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|a Includes bibliographical references and index.
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|a Print version record.
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|a Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Contents; List of figures and tables; Acknowledgements; Prologue: Down the Rabbit-hole; 1 What Is a Self?; The priest's turn; The philosopher's turn; The psychologist's turn; The neurologist's turn; The anthropologist's turn; Is there an answer?; 2 Where Did Self Come From?; The sense of not-self; The sense of almost-self; Senses of other and sense of self; Awareness; Sharing information; Do animals have awareness of self?; Non-humans using human language; What is special about human self-awareness?
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|a Does having an awareness of selfness mean there is a self to be aware of?3 The Modelled Self; How to make models of others; How to make models of relationships between others; Sharing models of others; Making models of my self; Me, myself and I; Awareness of selfness: for humans only?; Language, culture and the self; The disadvantages of a modelled self: deficient self and self-deception; Notes; 4 How Do We Become Selves?; The developing child: traditional approaches; The developing child: modern approaches; The developing child: deception; Timescales for self in childhood
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|a How to make a human adult (start with other human adults)Note; 5 Where Did Social Calculus Come From?; Social networks, genes and brains; Machiavellianism; The tragedy of the commons; Altruism; Altruistic punishment and free-riders; From altruistic punishment to social model-sharing; So where did social calculus come from?; Notes; 6 The Language of Self; Pronominalisation and selfhood; Where names come from; The origin of they; The origin of you and me; The origin of possession and the possessive; The origin of recursion and reflexivity; Self out of language, language out of self?; Notes
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|a 7 Metaphors of SelfTHE MODEL IS THE ACTUAL; THE GROUP IS AN ENTITY; SELF IS OTHER; I AM ME; ONE AMONG EQUALS; Mapping metaphor to rhetoric and deception; 8 What Is a Self? There and Back Again; The Actual self: unknowable; The Social self: the self others believe me to be; The self-model: the self I believe me to be; The Episodic self: the self as modelled in individual past events; The Narrative self: the remembered self, the self with history; The Cultural self: the self I should be; The Projected self: the self I want others to believe me to be; ... And there's more: some other selves
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|a Why self defines usNotes; 9 Epilogue: Snarks or Boojums?; The route to self-modelling; Yes, but ... who am I?; Bibliography; Index
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|a The Origins of Self explores the role that selfhood plays in defining human society, and each human individual in that society.
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|a JSTOR
|b Books at JSTOR Open Access
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|a JSTOR
|b Books at JSTOR All Purchased
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|a Self
|x Social aspects.
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|a Moi (Psychologie)
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|i Print version:
|a Edwardes, Martin P.J.
|t Origins of self.
|d London : UCL Press, 2019
|z 1787356329
|w (OCoLC)1097580118
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|u https://jstor.uam.elogim.com/stable/10.2307/j.ctv13xprvd
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