Clinical Psycholinguistics

Clinical Psycholinguistics by Theodore Shapiro, published by Springer US on November 26, 2012, is a softcover reprint of the original 1st edition from 1979, comprising 180 pages in English. This book explores the intersection of language and psychology, highlighting the complexities that arise when integrating various disciplines. It addresses the challenges and benefits of presenting new ideas within the context of psycholinguistics, emphasizing the historical evolution of psychology and its relationship with philosophy and linguistics.
Readers will find a detailed examination of how different fields approach the study of psychological processes and language. The text delves into the nuances of specialized language across disciplines and the implications of these differences for research and understanding. By discussing the historical context of psycholinguistics and its connections to movements in philosophy and psychology, this edition provides insights into the ongoing dialogue between these areas. The book serves as a resource for those interested in the interplay of linguistics, psychology, and psychotherapy.
Official synopsis Publisher
One of Moliere’s gauche characters in Le Bourgeoise Gentilhomme re sponds with surprise when he learns that he has been speaking prose all his life. The apparent discovery, reflected in his comment, provides us with both the virtues and the difficulties in presenting “yet another book,” especially one with a somewhat ambitious title as this one. The virtues may be cataloged under cross-fertilization among a number of disciplines which provides impetus to new ideas, work, and even dis coveries. The difficulties pertain to the difference in focus of each disci pline, the difference in the object each discipline chooses to study, and the difference in specialized language that accrues between fields of inquiry. Not too many years ago, natural science and especially psychology were within the confines of philosophy and its subsectors: the pre Socratic philosophers were essentially cosmologists, and only later, with Socrates and Plato’s work, did an interest in epistemology assume a central position within philosophy. Although this event put man at the center of philosophical inquiry, the emergence of techniques to study psychological processes per se was indeed late and, at that, long after natural science had edged away from philosophy. Recently, it is some times difficult to distinguish linguistics from philosophy, because there is a strong wave of philosophical thinking that is dependent on linguistic analysis, and the specialized linguistics of that area depends heavily on philosophical musings.
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