Feral Children
FeralChildren.com
Isolierte, eingesperrte, Wolfskinder und wilde Kinder
Kontakt FAQ Forum Link hierher Mailing-Liste Datenschutz Übersicht tell a friend Was gibt's Neues?
Home > Referenzen > Nachschlagewerke > The Cradle of Thought von Professor Peter Hobson

The Cradle of Thought

Hobson, Professor Peter
Macmillan, 2002-02-22
ISBN 9780333766330
 
FeralChildren.com sagt Imaginative and creative thought is what distinguishes humans from animals. It is what defines us as Homo sapiens. What it means to have thoughts, and what gives us the remarkable capacity to think, have been subjects of debate for centuries. In The Cradle of Thought, Peter Hobson presents a new and provocative theory about the nature and origins of uniquely human thinking.
Product Description Imaginative and creative thought is what distinguishes humans from animals. It is what defines us as Homo sapiens. What it means to have thoughts, and what gives us the remarkable capacity to think, have been subjects of debate for centuries. In The Cradle of Thought, Peter Hobson presents a new and provocative theory about the nature and origins of uniquely human thinking. A prevailing opinion on the acquisition of thought and language is that babies are born with pre-programmed modules in the brain. But this is too narrow and too simplistic an explanation. Professor Hobson's radical view is that what gives us the capacity to think is the quality of a baby's exchanges with other people over the first 18 months of life. As part and parcel of an intellectual revolution in the second year, the child achieves new insight into the minds of itself and others. Human thought, language, and self-awareness are developed in the cradle of emotional engagement between infant and caregiver; social contact has vital significance for mental development. Professor Hobson draws on 20 years of clinical experience and academic research as a developmental psychologist, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. He follows the thread of mental development over the first 18 months of ababy's life to describe and to explain the emergence of thinking; he shares startling insights into mental development gained from his studies of autism; and he shows how, from infancy to adulthood, disturbances of thinking may be rooted in troubled early relationships. Finally, he pinpoints tiny but momentus changes in the social relations of pre-human primates from which human thought sprang. In this fascinating and thought-provoking book, Peter Hobson shows how very early engagement with others fosters the child's growth out of the cradle of infancy and into the realm of human thought and culture.
Share with DeliciousDelicious Share with DiggDigg Share with FacebookFacebook Share with folkdfolkd Share with RedditReddit Share with StumbleUponStumbleUpon Tweet This!tweet
Auf dieser Seite suchen
powered by FreeFind
Sprachen
RSS
RSS feed
Subscribe with Bloglines
Add to My Yahoo!
Follow us on Twitter
Add to Google