3 books found
Departing from the sociological dual process model that divides thoughts into automatic and unconscious, or deliberate and conscious occurrences, this book draws on empirical cases to demonstrate the existence of “automatic deliberation.” Through research into the ways in which people address difficult subjects, such as death and dying, pedophilia, and career decision-making, the author sheds light on a mode of thinking which is both habitual and effortful, displaying a combination of habituated understandings and conscious deliberation. Advancing a blended view of cognition by which individuals draw on schemas and frames to think through complex topics, this volume will appeal to sociologists and psychologists with interests in cognition and the ways in which we make decisions.
by Charles Andrew Brown, Charles Bovett Sayre, Charles Leslie Stewart, Charles Spencer Crandall, Emil Wilhelm Lehmann, Frederick Charles Bauer, Harold Hanson Mitchell, Henry Perly Rusk, Jay Courtland Hackleman, John William Lloyd, Louie Henrie Smith, Tom Sherman Hamilton, Walter Lee Gaines, William Barbour Nevens, Arthur Maxwell Brunson, Arthur Moses Buswell, Horace Mead Newell, Lacey Fletcher Rickey, Roscoe Raymond Snapp, William Garfield Kammlade, William Leonidas Burlison, Lawrence Joseph Norton, Ogle Hesse Sears, Raymond Charles Kelleher
1928