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(1984) Cognitive constraints on communication, Dordrecht, Springer.
Insight and self-observation
their role in the analysis of the etiology of illness
Alfred H. Stanton
pp. 33-47
The subheading "On Reading Minds," is not without risk in a symposium of experts on schizophrenia, particularly if it suggests a cookbook set of directions. However, the way one reads minds is clear; it is similar to the way one reads books. One listens to what someone else has to say and hears what that person has in mind; not everything in his mind, and not necessarily accurately what is in his mind, but something of what he has in mind. This is a wonderful and improbable set of phenomena; that thoughts are quickly transferred back and forth between two organisms in a universe which, at first glance, would not seem to be a likely place for such an occurrence.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-9188-6_3
Full citation:
Stanton, A. H. (1984)., Insight and self-observation: their role in the analysis of the etiology of illness, in L. Vaina & J. Hintikka (eds.), Cognitive constraints on communication, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 33-47.
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