Friday, December 7, 2012

Welcome & Overview


Welcome to the Mind, Brain & Behaviour 2013 website.

This module explores a range of contemporary theories and debates at the intersection between psychology,  neuroscience, evolutionary theory, and philosophy, within the broader context of exploring and debating the nature of mind-brain-society relationships, and the future of a more neuroscientific psychology. Topics of interest have typically included various contemporary perspectives on consciousness, reasoning, emotion, embodiment, language, and evolution.

This module sets out to integrate a more theoretical and philosophical interest in the mind and brain with a grounding in contemporary interdisciplinary neuroscience. Theorists from a range of disciplines and backgrounds are increasingly putting forward 'grand theories' to account for the nature and evolution of consciousness, emotion, language, and other human features and capacities. Such theories and their underlying claims about the nature of the mind, the mind-brain complex, human evolution, and human psychosocial development, all make for fascinating and challenging targets of exploration and critique. This module is important and highly relevant in a context where psychology is becoming increasingly interdisciplinary and integrated with other brain sciences.

The module is especially recommended for those with an interest in cognition, consciousness, language, neuropsychology, neuroscience, evolution and evolutionary psychology, and theoretical and philosophical issues in psychology.

The course will be taught in Term 2 of 2013.

Further details about the content of the course in 2013 will be forthcoming in later posts. Please feel free to follow the blog by email, in order that you will be notified as soon as any new posts are made.

Please feel free to email Michael Pitman if you have any further questions about the course (subject to leave and availability over the December vacation period).

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