Experiential Processes and the Creation of Meaning
- process of experience and Creating Meaning
explained at the workshop.
- Study Session 1 on "Experiential Processes and the Creation of Meaning
- Study Session 2 on "Experiential Processes and the Creation of Meaning
- Study Session 3 on "Experiential Processes and the Creation of Meaning
- Experiential Processes and the Creation of Meaning" Study Session 4
- preface
- Things, Logic, and Experiential Processes
- Description of the "process of experience
- The demands of existentialism and logical positivism can be encompassed.
- The preconceptual experiential process is a fundamental factor that has prompted many recent calls for new methodologies in the behavioral sciences.
- Pre-conceptual characteristics of the experience process
- Content concepts are not useful for organizing observational material.
- Examples from the field of psychotherapy
- l The Problem of Experienced Meaning
- A Statement of Issue
This paper... This paper deals with meaning as experienced... The terms "felt meaning" and "experienced meaning" are used.
- B Two or three problems that serve as an introduction to the problem of experienced meaning
- methods in psychology
- problems in psychology
- Psychotherapy Content
What to focus on (past trauma, current problems, etc.) varies from faction to faction, but I wonder if there is a common structure where those with experience have a higher success rate than those without experience. The story is that
- subthreshold stimulus
- experience as a source of meaning 《Meaning begins with experience》 《Meaning begins with experience
- that intelligence is dependent on other
- C Issues not included in this assignment but related to it
- Causes of cognition
- Examples and discussion on separating current issues from these issues
- Chapter II: Examples of Felt Meaning at work in cognition
- Chapter III How Felt Meaning Works
- A: Parallel functional relations of felt meaning in cognition
- direct comparison (DIRECT REFERENCE)
- B: Creative functional relationships ("specific" and "non-parallel")
- understanding (COMPREHENSION)
- Related (RELEVANCE)
- CIRCUMLOCUTION
Eugene Gendlin's Metaphor Concept
- Chapter IV: Properties of Experienced Meaning Working Under the New Symbolization
- A: Experienced meaning is not dictated by logical relations, but neither is it arbitrarily acted upon.
- 1: Reversal of normal philosophical procedure
- 2: What determines the creation of meaning?
- summary
- B: Characteristics of experienced meaning as working within the new symbolization
- introduction
- 1: Myriad features of experience
- 2: The "multi-scheme" nature of experience
- 3: Meaning is similar (LIKENESSES) and vice versa Meaning is similar and vice versa..
- 4: Relationships or relations
- 5: Diversity
- 6: Any concept is one among many.
- 7: Experienced meanings can (partially) scheme (creatively determine) new aspects of other experienced meanings.
- 8: Every experience can have aspects that are schemeed by some other experience.
- 9: Creative regression
- Chapter V. Principle of Universality:"IOFI"
- introduction
- 1: Methodological questions can be matched to the meaning in the paper and the type of experiential process included in that role.
- 2: Identifying and "explaining" the process of experience as its own example.
- 3: Reflexivity: The process of experiencing as "IOFI" is a meaning
- 4: Potential applications of "IOFI
- 5: "IOFI" is the principle of functional relations
- 6: OPTIONAL DISTINCTION between "IOFI" and functional relations applied to relativity.
- 7: "IOFI", relativity and, moreover, illustrative issues applied against each other
- 8: REFLEXIVITY
- 9: The "IOFI" Principle and Traditional Philosophy
- Chapter VI Applications in Philosophy 2JJ
- A: The principle of philosophical method implied by relativity 23I.
- the myriad meanings that can arise "6
- OPTЮNAL FORMULATION "7
- open scheme (oPEN SCHEMES) "7
- scheem (scHEMES) rating "9
- Relativity of all terms (including the most basic terms that may be relative but whose fundamental nature is not compromised) 2ω
- Functional equivalence 2 Ku
- Logical form 245
- B: Conclusions on some philosophical issues 27
- Chapter VII: Psychological Theory and its Application to Research 255
- A: Terms to be matched to the experience process 10,0006
- Introduction 256
- Task: To be able to scientifically match the experience process 257
- observation of the function of the experience process 2"
- how can "experience process" be known or defined (some definitions of the term)?
- B: Current Controversies in Psychotherapy Theories 2 swords
- Degree and type of conceptualization in treatment 2.
- experience and "match" 279
- other types of symbolization roles 289
- C: Relationship between the proposed method and logical positivism and operationalism in psychology 295
- before the first positivist step in the research 2%.
- at the stage after the operative conclusion 2磐
- New Forms and Principles of Inquiry 299
- Appendix to Chapter I
- Phenomenological method θ
- Meaning experience can be identified and has its own dynamics in cognitionθ ".
- experience of meaning is distinguished from image or perception θ "
This page is auto-translated from /nishio/体験過程と意味の創造 using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I'm very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.