200 Pages
by
Routledge
200 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
In Selving: A Relational Theory of Self Organization , Irene Fast invokes the basic distinction between the self as "me" and the self as "I" in order to develop a contemporary theory of the self as subject. In a return to Freud's clinical finding that all psychological processes are personally motivated, she elaborates a notion of the "I-self" that is intrinsically dynamic and relational. Within... Read more
Preface
- Toward the Notion of a Dynamic I-Self
- Basic Structures
- The I-Self: Our Ways of Making Meaning
- Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness-I: Encoding Experience in Global I-Schemes
- Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness-II: Id Experiences in Global I-Schemes
- From Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness to First-Person Experiencing-I.
Toward an Internal World
- From Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness to First-Person Experiencing-II. Toward an External World
- What Sort of a Self Is This Dynamic Self?
- Toward the Notion of a Dynamic I-Self
- Basic Structures
- The I-Self: Our Ways of Making Meaning
- Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness-I: Encoding Experience in Global I-Schemes
- Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness-II: Id Experiences in Global I-Schemes
- From Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness to First-Person Experiencing-I.
Toward an Internal World
- From Selving Without a Sense of I-Ness to First-Person Experiencing-II. Toward an External World
- What Sort of a Self Is This Dynamic Self?
Biography
Irene Fast






