In New York City, on June 17 and 18, Psy Broadcasting Corporation is sponsoring a conference "Beyond Words: Implicit Communication & Therapeutic Change." Click for all the details .
Some of the presentations look enticing, but I am especially sorry I won't be attending this one:
Philip Bromberg
Ordinary Minds, Extraordinary Reach: Thoughts on Embodiment, State-Sharing, and the Lived Unconscious
The biologist Rupert Sheldrake proposed that our minds are not confined inside of our heads, but stretch out beyond them. From this perspective I offer the view that the future of human mental development is not only relational but that it is intersubjective in ways that go beyond what we can now accept as possible. I see the growth of the mind's capacity for intersubjectivity as an ongoing process of "playing with boundaries" whereby an affectively embodied self-and-other are jointly constructing an intersubjective realm in which the coexistence of seemingly incompatible perspectives on reality become
In New York City, on June 17 and 18, Psy Broadcasting Corporation is sponsoring a conference "Beyond Words: Implicit Communication & Therapeutic Change." Click for all the details .
Some of the presentations look enticing, but I am especially sorry I won't be attending this one:
Philip BrombergOrdinary Minds, Extraordinary Reach: Thoughts on Embodiment, State-Sharing, and the Lived Unconscious
The biologist Rupert Sheldrake proposed that our minds are not confined inside of our heads, but stretch out beyond them. From this perspective I offer the view that the future of human mental development is not only relational but that it is intersubjective in ways that go beyond what we can now accept as possible. I see the growth of the mind's capacity for intersubjectivity as an ongoing process of "playing with boundaries" whereby an affectively embodied self-and-other are jointly constructing an intersubjective realm in which the coexistence of seemingly incompatible perspectives on reality become
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