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A revolution of the mind: some implications of George Hogenson's ‘The Baldwin Effect: a neglected influence on C.G. Jung's evolutionary thinking’ (2001)
Authors:Warren Colman
Affiliation:, St. Albans, UK
Abstract:George Hogenson's 2001 paper ‘The Baldwin Effect: a neglected influence on C.G. Jung's evolutionary thinking’ developed the radical argument that, if archetypes are emergent, they ‘do not exist in the sense that there is no place that the archetypes can be said to be’. In this paper, I show how Hogenson's thinking has been seminal to my own: it is not just archetypes but the mind itself that has no ‘place’. The mind is a dynamic system, emergent from the cultural environment of symbolic meanings to which humans are evolutionarily adapted. Drawing on the work of philosopher John Searle, I argue that symbols constitute the realities that they bring forth, including the imaginal realities of the psyche. The implications for clinical work include a rejection of structural models of the psyche in favour of the emergence of symbolic realities in the context of psychoanalysis as a distributed system of cognition.
Keywords:archetypes  behindology  cognitive evolution  constitutive symbols  distributed cognition  emergence theory  Arché  types  connaissance ré  pandue  evolution cognitive  symboles constitutifs  thé  orie de l'é  mergence  Archetypen    behindology’    kognitive Entwicklung  konstitutive Symbole  verbreitetes Erkenntnissystem  Archetipi  evoluzione cognitiva  simboli costitutivi  cognizione distribuita  teoria emergente  а  р  х  е  т  и  п  ы    п  о  с  л  е  л  о  г  и  я    к  о  г  н  и  т  и  в  н  а  я   э  в  о  л  ю  ц  и  я    о  с  н  о  в  о  п  о  л  а  г  а  ю  щ  и  е   с  и  м  в  о  л  ы    т  е  о  р  и  я   я  в  л  е  н  и  я    Arquetipos    behindology’    evolució  n cognitiva    mbolos constitutivos  cognició  n distribuida  teorí  a de lo emergente
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