HOPR1.jpg 400 pages
12 CE credits

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HOMO PROSPECTUS

Martin Seligman, Peter Railton, Roy F. Baumeister, and Chandra Sripada
Oxford University Press, 2016

DESCRIPTION

Our species is misnamed. Though sapiens defines human beings as "wise" what humans do especially well is to prospect the future. We are homo prospectus. In this book, Martin E. P. Seligman, Peter Railton, Roy F. Baumeister, and Chandra Sripada argue it is anticipating and evaluating future possibilities for the guidance of thought and action that is the cornerstone of human success.

Much of the history of psychology has been dominated by a framework in which people's behavior is driven by past history (memory) and present circumstances (perception and motivation). Homo Prospectus reassesses this idea, pushing focus to the future front and center and opening discussion of a new field of Psychology and Neuroscience.

The authors delve into four modes in which prospection operates: the implicit mind, deliberate thought, mind-wandering, and collective (social) imagination. They then explore prospection's role in some of life's most enduring questions: Why do people think about the future? Do we have free will? What is the nature of intuition, and how might it function in ethics? How does emotion function in human psychology? Is there a common causal process in different psychopathologies? Does our creativity change with age?

In this remarkable convergence of research in philosophy, statistics, decision theory, psychology, and neuroscience, Homo Prospectus shows how human prospection fundamentally reshapes our understanding of key cognitive processes, thereby improving individual and social functioning. It aims to galvanize interest in this new science from scholars in psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy, as well as an educated public curious about what makes humanity what it is.

EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
The reader will be able to:
• Describe why human psychology is defined as attempts to predict the future, rather than the past or present
• Explain the role of intuitive guidance in the perception of psychology as well as in practice
• Explain how emotion is not only about the past or present, but is involved in extrapolation of the future
• Examine the processes where experience plays a large part in prediction
• Identify types of information needed for extrapolation of the current trend
• Track deliberative guidance in the counterfactual mode
• Explain the meaning and application of imaginative guidance
• Explore the elements involved with collective prospection and how its applied to prediction
• Explain the principle(s) behind pragmatic prospection
• Explain what is involved in human option construction
• Prospect how the future could feel based on the extrapolation of ideas presented in the book
• List some prospection of morality based on our understanding of its tenets today
• Explain why depression can be described as prospection gone awry
• Discuss creativity and aging and the heuristics involved with prospectus

AUTHOR

Marti E. P. Seligman, PhD, is director of the Penn Positive Psychology Center and professor of psychology in the Penn Department of Psychology, as well as Director of the Penn Master of Applied Positive Psychology program. Seligman is a leading authority in the fields of Positive Psychology, resilience, learned helplessness, depression, optimism and pessimism. He has written more than 275 scholarly publications and 25 books, including Flourish, and Authentic Happiness, both of which are in this catalog. Peter Railton, PhD, a professor of philosophy at University of Michigan, has worked in the philosophy of science, ethics, metaethics, political philosophy, and aesthetics. He has also taught at Berkeley and Princeton and been affiliated with various research centers in the U.S. and Europe. Roy F. Baumeister, PhD, professor of psychology at Florida State University, researches self and identity, self-regulation, interpersonal rejection and the need to belong, sexuality and gender, aggression, self-esteem, meaning, and self-presentation. He has written over 500 publications and 31 books, including: Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength and The Cultural Animal: Human Nature, Meaning, and Social Life.

Chandra Sripada, MD, PhD, is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Psychiatry at University of Michigan. Sripada studies brain mechanisms of decision-making, prospection, and self-control, and tries to understand how emerging results from the sciences impact our picture of ourselves as free and rational agents.

EDITORIAL REVIEWS

"An important insight about how the mind works, presented with a slew of fascinating discoveries and a refreshingly interdisciplinary approach."
--Steven Pinker, Johnstone Family Professor of Psychology, and author of The Language Instinct and How the Mind Works

"Homo Prospectus, is a groundbreaking book that capitalizes on 21st-century fMRI studies and user-friendly philosophy to create a paradigm shift that may make the book the most influential psychological text since Skinner's Science and Human Behavior. The concept of prospection developed in Homo Prospectus, of being drawn by the future, instead of-as both Freud and Skinner would have it-being driven by the past, reflects a true paradigm shift not only for academics and clinicians, but for the general reader."
--George E. Vaillant, MD, Author of Triumphs of Experience

"One of the greatest satisfactions in the life of the mind is learning something that feels deeply true, even familiar, that we never actually thought before, when a book articulates intuitions that we never quite knew we had. Homo Prospectus does just this. . . . The authors are eminent philosophers and psychologists who write beautifully. The book convincingly demonstrates that fast intuitive thinking is in fact comprehensive, complex, and well-informed, and applies this insight to domains ranging from morality to successful aging."
--Phoebe Ellsworth, PhD, Frank Murphy Distinguished University Professor of Psychology and Law, University of Michigan Law School

"As a whole, the chapters cover a tremendous wealth of issues psychological, philosophical, and neuroscientific all pertaining to prospection in varying degrees. Each chapter is chockfull of insightful observations that help build the case for prospection as a significant psychological phenomenon. As such, the volume represents a major contribution to psychological science."
--PsycCRITIQUES

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