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Logic, Syntax, and a Structural View - The Psychology of Trump's Hall of Mirrors

Logic, Syntax, and a Structural View - The Psychology of Trump's Hall of Mirrors

of: Harwood Fisher

Palgrave Macmillan, 2020

ISBN: 9783030608811 , 167 Pages

Format: PDF

Copy protection: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX,Windows PC,Mac OSX geeignet für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's

Price: 64,19 EUR



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Logic, Syntax, and a Structural View - The Psychology of Trump's Hall of Mirrors


 

This book presents a new structural approach to the psychology of the person, inspired by Kenneth Colby's computer-generated simulation, PARRY. The simulation was of a paranoid psychological state, represented in forms of the person's logic and syntax, as these would be evidenced in personal communication. Harwood Fisher uses a Structural View to highlight similarities in the logical form of the linguistic representations of Donald Trump, his avid followers ('Trumpers'), and the paranoid-referred to as 'The Trio.' He demonstrates how the Structural View forms a series of logical and schematic patterns, similar to the way that content analysis can bring forth associations meanings, and concepts held in the text. Such comparisons, Fisher argues, can be used to shed light on contingencies for presenting, representing, and judging truth. Specifically, Fisher posits that the major syntactic and logical patterns that were used to produce the computer-generated 'paranoid' responses in Colby's project can be used to analyze Donald Trump's rhetoric and his followers' reactions to it. Ultimately, Fisher offers a new kind of structural approach for the philosophy of psychology. This novel work will appeal to students and scholars of social and cognitive psychology, psychology of personality, psychiatric classification, psycholinguistics, rhetoric, and computer science.


Harwood Fisher is Professor Emeritus at City College, City University of New York, USA, and author of Schema Re-Schematized (2017), Self, Logic, and Figurative Thinking (2009), and The Subjective Self (2001). He researches subjective experiences as related to the logic of thinking, including logical and syntactic forms of metaphor and analogy.