Item added to cart
The neurosciences propose that the concept of will is scientifically untenable - it is our brain rather than our 'self' that controls our choices. Yet we seem to be confronted with increasing free choice in all areas of life. Using up-to-date empirical research in the social sciences and philosophy, this volume addresses the seeming contradiction.Introduction; S.Maasen & B. Sutter PART I: SELF - PAST AND PRESENT Self-Help: The Making of Neosocial Selves in Neoliberal Society; S.Maasen, B.Sutter & S.Duttweiler Technologies of the Will and their Christian Roots; I>A.Hahn & M.Schorch Governing By Will; S.Maasen , B.Sutter & S.Duttweiler PART II: SELF AND (SOCIO-)SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE Governing the Will in a Neurochemical Age; N.Rose The Person as an Effect of Communication; A.Nassehi PART III: SELF AND POLITICS Creating Citizen-Consumers? Public Service Reform and (Un)Willing Selves; J.Clarke, J. Newman & L.Westmarland Neopolitics: Voluntary Action in the Neoconservative Regime; B.Cruikshank 'Craving' Research: Smart Drugs and the Elusiveness of Desire; M.Valverde PART IV: SELF AND MORALITY From Voluntary to Relational Action: Responsibility and Value in a Global Context; K.J.Gergen The Role of the Self-Model for Self-Determination; T.VierkantJOHN CLARKE Professor of Social Policy, Open University, UKBARBARA CRUIKSHANK Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, the University of Massachusetts, USASTEFANIE DUTTWEILER Research Assistant, the University of Basel, SwitzerlandKENNETH J. GERGEN Mustin Professor of Psychology, Swarthmore College, USAALOIS HAHN Professor of Sociology, Trier University, GermanyAMIN NASSEHI Professor of Sociology, University of Munich, GermanyJANET NEWMAN Professor of Social Policy, The Open University, UKNIKOLAS ROSE Professor of Sociology, the London School of Economics and Political Science, UKMAREN SCHORCH Research Assistant, the Department of Sociology, the University of Trier, GermanyMARIANA VALVERDE lĂL
Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell