Emotions, embodied cognition and the adaptive unconscious: a complex topography of the social making of things
In: Complexity in social science
Introduction: Basic Concepts, Content and StructurePart 1. The Legacy of Critical Rationalism: An Attempted Maturity1. Kant, Nietzshe: Maturity, Genealogy, and Freedom2. Weber's 'Suspended' Rationalism, Heidegger's Conservative Turn and Interwar Perspectives in Europe3. Archaeology, Genealogy, Alterity, Discourse, and Power: The Legacy and Influence of Foucault 4. Postmodernity and Its Discontents: Liquidity and Uncertainty. Castells, Lyotard, and Bauman, on the Landscape of Contested Identity and Performativity5. Conclusions and Criticisms: The Case for a Complex Topography Part 2. Alternative Foundations for a Mature Concept of Community6. Automaticity and the Role of the Adaptive Unconscious7. The Case for Basic Emotion Theory -- Contrasted with Anthropological and Historical Perspectives8. Towards an Ecology of the Senses 9. Evolutionary Psychology 10. Selective, Serial, and Parallel Processing in Theories of Adaptive Cognition11. An Ecological Approach to Representation and Language 12. Concluding Remarks to Part 2Part 3. Constants and Dynamics in Complex Social Expression 13. The Social as a Theatre of the Unconscious, Preconscious, and Conscious Assessment and Deliberation14. Basic, Developmental, and Constructivist Theories of Affect and Consciousness15. Auto-exo-reference: Representation and Language in Mediated Relation to an Environment and the Processes of Self-reference16. Forms of Solidarity: The Topology of Power and Its Affective and Cognitive Consequences17. The Dynamics of Conservatism and Liberalism: A Contested Common Moral Ground18. A Post-humanist Epilogue: The Making of Things; The Complex Topography of Agency