Postcognitive psychology explained
Postcognitive psychology is the postmodern condition of a psychology yet to come as proposed by theorist Matthew Giobbi.[1] The term postcognitive was first used in Giobbi's book A Postcognitive Negation: The Sadomasochistic Dialectic of American Psychology.[2] Psychologists and theorists have discussed the post-cognitive[3] [4] which Giobbi differentiates by exclusion of the hyphen. Giobbi's postcognitive is a folding upon itself in a non-linear fashion which transcends the narrative function of the hyphen, thus leaving the field on a plateau of new ways of doing psychology.[5]
Notes and References
- Web site: A Postcognitive Negation . 2011-02-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110708040426/http://giobbiart.blogspot.com/ . 2011-07-08 .
- Web site: A Postcognitive Negation: The Sadomasochistic Dialectic of American Psychology . 2011-02-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110707183713/http://www.atropospress.com/publications/a-postcognitive-negation-the-sadomasochistic-dialectic-of-american-psychology/ . 2011-07-07 . dead .
- Web site: Psychotherapy .
- Potter . Jonathan . February 2000 . Post-Cognitive Psychology . Theory & Psychology . en . 10 . 1 . 31–37 . 10.1177/0959354300010001596 . 0959-3543.
- Web site: Archived copy . 2011-02-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110728122239/http://www.transdisciplinarypsych.org/Final_Giobbi.pdf . 2011-07-28 .