The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit
Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusive...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
Weger, Ulrich [verfasserIn] |
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Format: |
E-Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
Erschienen: |
2015transfer abstract |
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Umfang: |
11 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
Enthalten in: Turning carpets into multi-image switchable displays - Yamamoto, Takumi ELSEVIER, 2023, an international journal of innovative theory in psychology, Amsterdam [u.a.] |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:39 ; year:2015 ; pages:23-33 ; extent:11 |
Links: |
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DOI / URN: |
10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 |
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ELV029020972 |
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10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 doi GBVA2015013000007.pica (DE-627)ELV029020972 (ELSEVIER)S0732-118X(15)00035-5 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng 150 150 DE-600 004 VZ 54.73 bkl Weger, Ulrich verfasserin aut The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit 2015transfer abstract 11 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. First-person research Elsevier Methodological aspects of psychological research Elsevier Dimensions of psychological phenomena Elsevier Wagemann, Johannes oth Enthalten in Elsevier Science Yamamoto, Takumi ELSEVIER Turning carpets into multi-image switchable displays 2023 an international journal of innovative theory in psychology Amsterdam [u.a.] (DE-627)ELV009876332 volume:39 year:2015 pages:23-33 extent:11 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 Volltext GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ELV SYSFLAG_U 54.73 Computergraphik VZ AR 39 2015 23-33 11 045F 150 |
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10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 doi GBVA2015013000007.pica (DE-627)ELV029020972 (ELSEVIER)S0732-118X(15)00035-5 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng 150 150 DE-600 004 VZ 54.73 bkl Weger, Ulrich verfasserin aut The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit 2015transfer abstract 11 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. First-person research Elsevier Methodological aspects of psychological research Elsevier Dimensions of psychological phenomena Elsevier Wagemann, Johannes oth Enthalten in Elsevier Science Yamamoto, Takumi ELSEVIER Turning carpets into multi-image switchable displays 2023 an international journal of innovative theory in psychology Amsterdam [u.a.] (DE-627)ELV009876332 volume:39 year:2015 pages:23-33 extent:11 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 Volltext GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ELV SYSFLAG_U 54.73 Computergraphik VZ AR 39 2015 23-33 11 045F 150 |
allfields_unstemmed |
10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 doi GBVA2015013000007.pica (DE-627)ELV029020972 (ELSEVIER)S0732-118X(15)00035-5 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng 150 150 DE-600 004 VZ 54.73 bkl Weger, Ulrich verfasserin aut The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit 2015transfer abstract 11 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. First-person research Elsevier Methodological aspects of psychological research Elsevier Dimensions of psychological phenomena Elsevier Wagemann, Johannes oth Enthalten in Elsevier Science Yamamoto, Takumi ELSEVIER Turning carpets into multi-image switchable displays 2023 an international journal of innovative theory in psychology Amsterdam [u.a.] (DE-627)ELV009876332 volume:39 year:2015 pages:23-33 extent:11 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 Volltext GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ELV SYSFLAG_U 54.73 Computergraphik VZ AR 39 2015 23-33 11 045F 150 |
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10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 doi GBVA2015013000007.pica (DE-627)ELV029020972 (ELSEVIER)S0732-118X(15)00035-5 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng 150 150 DE-600 004 VZ 54.73 bkl Weger, Ulrich verfasserin aut The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit 2015transfer abstract 11 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. First-person research Elsevier Methodological aspects of psychological research Elsevier Dimensions of psychological phenomena Elsevier Wagemann, Johannes oth Enthalten in Elsevier Science Yamamoto, Takumi ELSEVIER Turning carpets into multi-image switchable displays 2023 an international journal of innovative theory in psychology Amsterdam [u.a.] (DE-627)ELV009876332 volume:39 year:2015 pages:23-33 extent:11 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 Volltext GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ELV SYSFLAG_U 54.73 Computergraphik VZ AR 39 2015 23-33 11 045F 150 |
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10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 doi GBVA2015013000007.pica (DE-627)ELV029020972 (ELSEVIER)S0732-118X(15)00035-5 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng 150 150 DE-600 004 VZ 54.73 bkl Weger, Ulrich verfasserin aut The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit 2015transfer abstract 11 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. First-person research Elsevier Methodological aspects of psychological research Elsevier Dimensions of psychological phenomena Elsevier Wagemann, Johannes oth Enthalten in Elsevier Science Yamamoto, Takumi ELSEVIER Turning carpets into multi-image switchable displays 2023 an international journal of innovative theory in psychology Amsterdam [u.a.] (DE-627)ELV009876332 volume:39 year:2015 pages:23-33 extent:11 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newideapsych.2015.07.002 Volltext GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ELV SYSFLAG_U 54.73 Computergraphik VZ AR 39 2015 23-33 11 045F 150 |
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The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit |
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The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit |
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behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: body, soul and spirit |
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The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit |
abstract |
Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. |
abstractGer |
Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. |
abstract_unstemmed |
Psychological phenomena can be described on different levels of analysis: on an experiential level (e.g., what is it like to be attentive); and on a behavioral level (e.g., how does it become evident that someone is attentive). In the following, we outline how the widely prevalent focus on exclusively behavioral characteristics is insufficient and how our understanding of psychological phenomena can be enriched by taking the qualitative dimension of experience into consideration. We then scrutinize components of this experiential realm and report how it provides the stage for a third level: conceptual insight (e.g., what types or phases of attention can be distinguished). We subsequently look at the history of science and relate the behavioral aspect to the material realm (the realm of the body); the experiential aspect to what has been historically referred to as the soul realm; and the conceptual aspect to what has been historically referred to as the spirit realm. Finally, we add a first-person trial to delineate these concepts further and scrutinize them in light of contemporary theory-building. |
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The behavioral, experiential and conceptual dimensions of psychological phenomena: Body, soul and spirit |
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