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George Herbert Mead

George Herbert Mead (February 27, 1863 – April 26, 1931) was an American philosopher, sociologist, and psychologist, primarily affiliated with the University of Chicago, where he was one of several distinguished pragmatists. He is regarded as one of the founders of symbolic interactionism and of what has come to be referred to as the Chicago sociological tradition.

George Herbert Mead
Born(1863-02-27)February 27, 1863
DiedApril 26, 1931(1931-04-26) (aged 68)
Alma mater
Notable workMind, Self and Society
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolPragmatism
Institutions
Influences

Biography

George Herbert Mead was born February 27, 1863, in South Hadley, Massachusetts. He was raised in a Protestant, middle-class family comprising his father, Hiram Mead, his mother, Elizabeth Storrs Mead (née Billings), and his sister Alice. His father was a former Congregationalist pastor from a lineage of farmers and clergymen and who later held the chair in Sacred Rhetoric and Pastoral Theology at Oberlin College's theological seminary. Elizabeth taught for two years at Oberlin College and subsequently, from 1890 to 1900, served as president of Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts.[2]

In 1879, George Mead enrolled at the Oberlin Academy at Oberlin College and then the college itself, graduating in 1883 with a Bachelor of Arts.[3] After graduation, Mead taught grade school for about four months. For the following three years, he worked as a surveyor for the Wisconsin Central Railroad Company.

In autumn 1887, Mead enrolled at Harvard University, where his main interests were philosophy and psychology. At Harvard, Mead studied with Josiah Royce, a major influence upon his thought, and William James, whose children he tutored. In 1888, Mead left Harvard after receiving only a B.A. and moved to Leipzig, Germany to study with psychologist Wilhelm Wundt, from whom he learned the concept of "the gesture", which would become central to his later work.

In 1891, Mead married Helen Kingsbury Castle (1860–1929), the sister of Henry Northrup Castle (1862–1895), a friend he met at Oberlin.[4] Despite never finishing his dissertation, Mead was able to obtain a post at the University of Michigan in 1891. There, Mead met Charles H. Cooley and John Dewey, both of whom would influence him greatly.[5] In 1894, Mead moved, along with Dewey, to the University of Chicago, where he taught until his death. Dewey's influence led Mead into educational theory, but his thinking soon diverged from that of Dewey, and developed into his famous psychological theories of mind, self and society.[6]: 352–53 

No detached philosopher, he was active in Chicago's social and political affairs; his many activities include work for the City Club of Chicago. Mead believed that science could be used to deal with social problems and played a key role in conducting research at the settlement house in Chicago.[7][6]: 353  He also worked as treasurer for Chicago's Hull House.[8][9]

Mead died of heart failure on April 26, 1931.

Theory

Pragmatism and symbolic interaction

Much of Mead's work focused on the development of the self and the objectivity of the world within the social realm: he insisted that "the individual mind can exist only in relation to other minds with shared meanings".[10]: 5  The two most important roots of Mead's work, and of symbolic interactionism in general, are the philosophy of pragmatism and social behaviorism.

Social behaviorism (as opposed to psychological behaviorism) refers to Mead's concern of the stimuli of gestures and social objects with rich meanings, rather than bare physical objects which psychological behaviourists considered stimuli.

Pragmatism is a wide-ranging philosophical position from which several aspects of Mead's influences can be identified into four main tenets:[11]

  1. True reality does not exist "out there" in the real world, it "is actively created as we act in and toward the world".
  2. People remember and base their knowledge of the world on what has been useful to them and are likely to alter what no longer "works".
  3. People define the social and physical "objects" they encounter in the world according to their use for them.
  4. If we want to understand actors, we must base that understanding on what people actually do.

Three of these ideas are critical to symbolic interactionism:

  • the focus on the interaction between the actor and the world;
  • a view of both the actor and the world as dynamic processes and not static structures; and
  • the actor's ability to interpret the social world.

Thus, to Mead and symbolic interactionists, consciousness is not separated from action and interaction, but is an integral part of both. Symbolic interactionism as a pragmatic philosophy was an antecedent to the philosophy of transactionalism.[12] Mead's theories in part, based on pragmatism and behaviorism, were transmitted to many graduate students at the University of Chicago who then went on to establish symbolic interactionism.[6]: 347–50 [13]

Social philosophy (behaviorism)

Mead was a very important figure in 20th-century social philosophy. One of his most influential ideas was the emergence of mind and self from the communication process between organisms, discussed in Mind, Self and Society (1934), also known as social behaviorism.[14] This concept of how the mind and self emerge from the social process of communication by signs founded the symbolic interactionist school of sociology.

Rooted intellectually in Hegelian dialectics and process philosophy, Mead, like John Dewey, developed a more materialist process philosophy that was based upon human action and specifically communicative action. Human activity is, in a pragmatic sense, the criterion of truth, and through human activity meaning is made. Joint activity, including communicative activity, is the means through which our sense of self is constituted. The essence of Mead's social behaviorism is that mind is not a substance located in some transcendent realm, nor is it merely a series of events that takes place within the human physiological structure. This approach opposed the traditional view of the mind as separate from the body. The emergence of mind is contingent upon interaction between the human organism and its social environment; it is through participation in the social act of communication that individuals realize their potential for significantly symbolic behavior—that is, thought. Mind, in Mead's terms, is the individualized focus of the communication process. It is linguistic behavior on the part of the individual. There is, then, no "mind or thought without language"; and language (the content of mind) "is only a development and product of social interaction".[15]: 191–92  Thus, mind is not reducible to the neurophysiology of the organic individual, but is emergent in "the dynamic, ongoing social process"[15]: 7  that constitutes human experience.[16]

For Mead, mind arises out of the social act of communication. Mead's concept of the social act is relevant not only to his theory of mind, but to all facets of his social philosophy. His theory of "mind, self, and society" is, in effect, a philosophy of the act from the standpoint of a social process involving the interaction of many individuals, just as his theory of knowledge and value is a philosophy of the act from the standpoint of the experiencing individual in interaction with an environment.[16] Action is very important to his social theory and, according to Mead, actions also occur within a communicative process.

The initial phase of an act constitutes a gesture. A gesture is a preparatory movement that enables other individuals to become aware of the intentions of the given organism. The rudimentary situation is a conversation of gestures, in which a gesture on the part of the first individual evokes a preparatory movement on the part of the second, and the gesture of the second organism in turn calls out a response in the first person. On this level no communication occurs. Neither organism is aware of the effect of its own gestures upon the other; the gestures are nonsignificant. For communication to take place, each organism must have knowledge of how the other individual will respond to its own ongoing act. Here the gestures are significant symbols.[14] A significant symbol is a kind of gesture that only humans can make.[i] Gestures become significant symbols when they arouse in the individual who is making them the same kind of response they are supposed to elicit from those to whom the gestures are addressed. Only when we have significant symbols can we truly have communication.[6]: 356–57  Mead grounded human perception in an "action-nexus".[17]: 148  We perceive the world in terms of the "means of living."[10]: 120  To perceive food is to perceive eating. To perceive a house is to perceive shelter. That is to say, perception is in terms of action. Mead's theory of perception is similar to that of J. J. Gibson.

Social acts

Mead argued, in tune with Durkheim, that the individual is a product of an ongoing, pre-existing society; or, more specifically, of social interaction that is a consequence of a sui generis society. The self arises when the individual becomes an object to themself. Mead argued that we are objects first to other people, and secondarily we become objects to ourselves by taking the perspective of other people. Language enables us to talk about ourselves in the same way as we talk about other people, and thus through language we become other to ourselves.[18] In joint activity, which Mead called social acts, humans learn to see themselves from the standpoint of their co-actors. A central mechanism within the social act, which enables perspective taking, is position exchange. People within a social act often alternate social positions (e.g., giving/receiving, asking/helping, winning/losing, hiding/seeking, talking/listening). In children's games there is repeated position exchange, for example in hide-and-seek, and Mead argued that this is one of the main ways that perspective taking develops.

However, for Mead, unlike Dewey and J. J. Gibson, the key is not simply human action, but rather social action. In humans the "manipulatory phase of the act" is socially mediated; that is to say, in acting towards objects humans simultaneously take the perspectives of others toward that object. This is what Mead means by "the social act" as opposed to simply "the act" (the latter being a Deweyan concept). Non-human animals also manipulate objects, but that is a non-social manipulation; they do not take the perspective of other organisms toward the object. Humans, on the other hand, take the perspective of other actors towards objects, and this is what enables complex human society and subtle social coordination. In the social act of economic exchange, for example, both buyer and seller must take each other's perspectives toward the object being exchanged. The seller must recognize the value for the buyer, while the buyer must recognize the desirability of money for the seller. Only with this mutual perspective taking can the economic exchange occur. (Mead was influenced on this point by Adam Smith.)

Nature of the self

A final piece of Mead's social theory is the mind as the individual importation of the social process.[15]: 178–79  Mead states that "the self is a social process", meaning that there are series of actions that go on in the mind to help formulate one's complete self. As previously discussed, Mead presented the self and the mind in terms of a social process. As gestures are taken in by the individual organism, the individual organism also takes in the collective attitudes of others, in the form of gestures, and reacts accordingly with other organized attitudes.[15]: 178–79  This process is characterized by Mead as the I and the Me. The 'Me' is the social self and the 'I' is the response to the 'Me'. In other words, the 'I' is the response of an individual to the attitudes of others, while the 'Me' is the organized set of attitudes of others which an individual assumes.[19][15]: 174–86 

Mead develops William James' distinction between the 'I' and the 'Me'. The 'Me' is the accumulated understanding of "the generalized other—i.e., how one thinks one's group perceives oneself, and so on. The 'I' is the individual's impulses. The 'I' is self as subject; the 'Me' is self as object. The 'I' is the knower; the 'Me' is the known. The mind, or stream of thought, is the self-reflective movements of the interaction between the 'I' and the 'Me'. There is neither 'I' nor 'Me' in the conversation of gestures; the whole act is not yet carried out, but the preparation takes place in this field of gesture.[15]: 175  These dynamics go beyond selfhood in a narrow sense, and form the basis of a theory of human cognition. For Mead the thinking process is the internalized dialogue between the 'I' and the 'Me'. Mead rooted the self's "perception and meaning" deeply and sociologically in "a common praxis of subjects", found specifically in social encounters.[17]: 166 

Understood as a combination of the 'I' and the 'Me', Mead's self proves to be noticeably entwined within a sociological existence. For Mead, existence in community comes before individual consciousness. First one must participate in the different social positions within society and only subsequently can one use that experience to take the perspective of others and thus become 'conscious'.

Philosophy of science

Mead was a major American philosopher by virtue of being—along with John Dewey, Charles Peirce and William James— one of the founders of pragmatism. He also made significant contributions to the philosophies of nature, science, and history, to philosophical anthropology, and to process philosophy. Dewey and Alfred North Whitehead considered Mead a thinker of the first rank. He is a classic example of a social theorist whose work does not fit easily within conventional disciplinary boundaries.

In his work on philosophy of science, Mead sought to find the psychological origin of science in the efforts of individuals to attain power over their environment. The notion of a physical object arises out of manipulatory experience. There is a social relation to inanimate objects, for the organism takes the role of things that it manipulates directly, or that it manipulates indirectly in perception. For example, in taking (introjecting or imitating) the resistant role of a solid object, an individual obtains cognition of what is "inside" nonliving things. Historically, the concept of the physical object arose from an animistic conception of the universe.

Contact experience includes experiences of position, balance, and support, and these are used by the organism when it creates its conceptions of the physical world. Our scientific concepts of space, time, and mass are abstracted from manipulatory experience. Such concepts as that of the electron are also derived from manipulation. In developing a science we construct hypothetical objects in order to assist ourselves in controlling nature. The conception of the present as a distinct unit of experience, rather than as a process of becoming and disappearing, is a scientific fiction devised to facilitate exact measurement. In the scientific worldview, immediate experience is replaced by theoretical constructs. The ultimate in experience, however, is the manipulation and contact at the completion of an act.[14]

Play and game and the generalized other

Mead theorized that human beings begin their understanding of the social world through "play" and "game". Play comes first in the child's development. The child takes different roles that he/she observes in "adult" society, and plays them out to gain an understanding of the different social roles. For instance, a child may first play the role of police officer and then the role of thief while playing "Cops and Robbers", and play the roles of doctor and patient when playing "Doctor". As a result of such play, the child learns to become both subject and object and begins to become able to build a self. However, it is a limited self, because the child can only take the role of distinct and separate others; they still lack a more general and organized sense of themself.[6]: 360 

In the next stage, the game stage, it is required that a person develop a full sense of self. Whereas in the play stage the child takes on the role of distinct others, in the game stage the child must take on the role of everyone else involved in the game. Furthermore, these roles must have a definite relationship to one another. To illustrate the game stage, Mead gives his famous example of a baseball game:[15]: 151 

But in a game where a number of individuals are involved, then the child taking one role must be ready to take the role of everyone else. If he gets in a ball nine he must have the responses of each position involved in his own position. He must know what everyone else is going to do in order to carry out his own play. He has to take all of these roles. They do not all have to be present in consciousness at the same time, but at some moments he has to have three or four individuals present in his own attitude, such as the one who is going to throw the ball, the one who is going to catch it and so on. These responses must be, in some degree, present in his own make-up. In the game, then, there is a set of responses of such others so organized that the attitude of one calls out the appropriate attitudes of the other.

In the game stage, organization begins and definite personalities start to emerge. Children begin to become able to function in organized groups and, most importantly, to determine what they will do within a specific group.[6]: 360–61  Mead calls this the child's first encounter with "the generalized other", which is one of the main concepts that Mead proposes for understanding the emergence of the (social) self in human beings. "The generalized other" can be thought of as understanding the given activity and the actors' place within the activity from the perspective of all the others engaged in the activity. Through understanding "the generalized other", the individual understands what kind of behavior is expected, appropriate and so on, in different social settings.

Some may find that social acts (e.g. games and routine forms of social interaction) enable perspective taking through "position exchange".[20] Assuming that games and routine social acts have differentiated social positions, and that these positions create our cognitive perspectives, then it might be that by moving between roles in a game (e.g. between hiding and seeking or buying and selling) we come to learn about the perspective of the other. This new interpretation of Mead's account of taking the perspective of the other has experimental support.[21] Other recent publications argue that Mead's account of the development of perspective taking is relevant not only with respect to human ontogeny but also to the evolution of human sociality.[22]

Writings

In a career spanning more than 40 years, Mead wrote almost constantly and published numerous articles and book reviews in both philosophy and psychology. However, he did not publish any books. Following his death, several of his students put together and edited four volumes from records of Mead's social psychology course at the University of Chicago, his lecture notes (Mead's Carus Lectures, 1930, edited by Charles W. Morris), and his numerous unpublished papers.

In his lifetime, Mead published around 100 scholarly articles, reviews, and incidental pieces. Given their diverse nature, access to these writings is difficult. The first editorial efforts to change this situation date from the 1960s. In 1964, Andrew J. Reck collected twenty-five of Mead's published articles in Selected Writings: George Herbert Mead.[23][16] Four years later, John W. Petras published George Herbert Mead: Essays on his Social Psychology, a collection of fifteen articles that included previously unpublished manuscripts.

More recently, Mary Jo Deegan (2001) published Essays in Social Psychology, a book project originally abandoned by Mead in the early 1910s.[24] In 2010, Filipe Carreira da Silva edited G.H. Mead. A Reader, a comprehensive collection including thirty of Mead's most important articles, ten of them previously unpublished.[25] Likewise, the Mead Project at Brock University in Toronto intends to publish all of Mead's 80-odd remaining unpublished manuscripts.[26]

Bibliography

Collected volumes (posthumous)

  • 1932. The Philosophy of the Present.[27]
  • 1934. Mind, Self, and Society.[15]
  • 1936. Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century.[28]
  • 1938. The Philosophy of the Act.[29]
  • 1964. Selected Writings.[30] — This volume collects articles Mead himself prepared for publication.
  • 1982. The Individual and the Social Self: Unpublished Essays by G. H. Mead.[31]
  • 2001. Essays in Social Psychology.[24]
  • 2010. G.H. Mead. A Reader.[25]

Notable papers

  • "Suggestions Towards a Theory of the Philosophical Disciplines" (1900);[32]
  • "Social Consciousness and the Consciousness of Meaning" (1910);[33]
  • "What Social Objects Must Psychology Presuppose" (1910);[34]
  • "The Mechanism of Social Consciousness" (1912);[35]
  • "The Social Self" (1913);[36]
  • "Scientific Method and the Individual Thinker"(1917);[37]
  • "A Behavioristic Account of the Significant Symbol" (1922);[38]
  • "The Genesis of Self and Social Control" (1925);[39]
  • "The Objective Reality of Perspectives" (1926);[40]
  • "The Nature of the Past" (1929);[41] and
  • "The Philosophies of Royce, James, and Dewey in Their American Setting" (1929).[42]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This has been a contentious issue in the burgeoning field of Human Animal Studies. For a discussion see: Wilkie, Rhoda, and Andrew McKinnon. 2013. "George Herbert Mead on Humans and Other Animals: Social Relations after Human-Animal Studies." Sociological Research Online 18(4):19.

References

  1. ^ David L. Miller, "Josiah Royce and George H. Mead on the Nature of the Self", Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society, Summer 1975, vol. XI, no.2, p. 67-89.
  2. ^ Baldwin, John (2009). George Herbert Mead. Sage. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-8039-2320-1.
  3. ^ "George herbert mead".
  4. ^ Cook, Gary A. (1993). George Herbert Mead: the making of a social pragmatist. University of Illinois Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-252-06272-8.
  5. ^ Miller, David (2009). George Herbert Mead: Self, Language, and the World. University of Texas Press. pp. xii–xix. ISBN 978-0-292-72700-7.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Ritzer, George (2008). Sociological Theory. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-352818-2.
  7. ^ George H. Mead (1907). "The Social Settlement: Its basis and function". University of Chicago Record: 108–110.
  8. ^ Ritzer, George (2004). Encyclopedia of Social Theory. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE Publications. p. 491. ISBN 0-7619-2611-9.
  9. ^ . www.lib.uchicago.edu. 2003. Archived from the original on 2020-11-24.
  10. ^ a b Mead, George Herbert. 1982. The Individual and the Social Self: Unpublished Essays by G. H. Mead, edited by D. L. Miller. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-608-09479-3
  11. ^ McDermid, Douglas. "Pragmatism." Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. ISSN 2161-0002.
  12. ^ Phillips, Trevor J.; Tibbels, Kirkland; Patterson, John (2015). (2 ed.). Influence Ecology. p. 54. Archived from the original on 2016-09-24.
  13. ^ Nungesser, Frithjof. 2021. "Pragmatism and Interaction." In: Routledge International Handbook of Interactionism, edited by Dirk Vom Lehn, Natalia Ruiz-Junco, and Will Gibson. London; New York: Routledge: 25-36. ISBN 9780367227708
  14. ^ a b c Desmonde, William H (2006) [1967]. "Mead, George Herbert (1863-1931)". In Borchert, Donald M. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Vol. 6. Macmillan Reference. pp. 79–82. ISBN 0-02-865786-1.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Mead, George Herbert. 1967 [1934]. Mind, Self, and Society, edited by C. W. Morris. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-51668-4.
  16. ^ a b c Cronk, George (2005), "George Herbert Mead", in Fieser, James; Dowden, Bradley (eds.), The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  17. ^ a b Joas, Hans. 1985. George Herbert Mead: A Contemporary Re-examination of His Thought. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  18. ^ Gillespie, Alex (2006). Becoming Other: From Social Interaction to Self-Reflection. Information Age Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59311-230-1.
  19. ^ Margolis, Joseph; Jacques Catudal (2001). The Quarrel between Invariance and Flux. Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press.
  20. ^ Alex Gillespie (2012). "Position exchange: The social development of agency". New Ideas in Psychology. 30 (1): 32–46. doi:10.1016/j.newideapsych.2010.03.004.
  21. ^ Alex Gillespie (2011). "Exchanging social positions: Enhancing intersubjective coordination within a joint task". European Journal of Social Psychology. 41: 608–616. doi:10.1002/ejsp.788.
  22. ^ Nungesser, Frithjof. "The Social Evolution of Perspective-taking. Mead, Tomasello, and the Development of Human Agency" (PDF). Pragmatism Today. 11: 84–105.
  23. ^ Selected Writings: George Herbert Mead. Bobbs-Merrill, The Liberal Arts Press. 1964.
  24. ^ a b Mead, George Herbert. 2001 [c. 1910s]. Essays in Social Psychology, edited by M. J. Deegan. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction. ISBN 0-765-80082-9.
  25. ^ a b da Silva, Filipe Carreira, ed. 2010. G.H. Mead. A Reader. London: Routledge.
  26. ^ The Mead Project at Brock University
  27. ^ Mead, George Herbert. 1932. The Philosophy of the Present. Open Court Publishing.
  28. ^ Mead, George Herbert. 1936. Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century, edited by Merritt H. Moore. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  29. ^ Mead, George Herbert. 1938. The Philosophy of the Act, edited by C. W. Morris, et al. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  30. ^ Reck, Andrew J., ed. 1964. Selected Writings: George Herbert Mead. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-51671-4.
  31. ^ Miller, David L., ed. 1982. The Individual and the Social Self: Unpublished Essays by G. H. Mead. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-608-09479-3.
  32. ^ [1] "Suggestions Towards a Theory of the Philosophical Disciplines" (1900)
  33. ^ [2] "Social Consciousness and the Consciousness of Meaning" (1910)
  34. ^ [3] "What Social Objects Must Psychology Presuppose" (1910)
  35. ^ [4] "The Mechanism of Social Consciousness"
  36. ^ Mead, George Herbert. 1913. "The Social Self." Journal of Philosophy, Psychology, and Scientific Methods 10:374–80. – via Classics in the History of Psychology, transcribed by C. D. Green. Toronto: York University. Also available via The Mead Project. Toronto: Brock University.
  37. ^ [5] "Scientific Method and the Individual Thinker" (1917)
  38. ^ [6] "A Behavioristic Account of the Significant Symbol" (1922)
  39. ^ "George Herbert Mead: The Genesis of the Self and Social Control". Brocku.ca. Retrieved 2013-08-01.
  40. ^ "George Herbert Mead: The Objective Reality of Perspectives". Brocku.ca. Retrieved 2013-08-01.
  41. ^ "George Herbert Mead: The Nature of the Past". Brocku.ca. Retrieved 2013-08-01.
  42. ^ "George Herbert Mead: The Philosophies of Royce, James and Dewey in their American setting". Brocku.ca. Retrieved 2013-08-01.

Further reading

  • Aboulafia, Mitchell, ed. 1991. Philosophy, Social Theory, and the Thought of George Herbert Mead. Albany: SUNY Press.
  • — 2001. The Cosmopolitan Self: George Herbert Mead and Continental Philosophy. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
  • Biesta, Gert, and Daniel Tröhler, ed. 2008. G. H. Mead: the Philosophy of Education. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers. ISBN 9781594515309
  • Blumer, H. & Morrione, T. J. 2004. George Herbert Mead and Human Conduct. New York: Altamira Press.
  • Burke, Thomas, and Skowroński, Krzysztof Piotr, eds. 2013. George Herbert Mead in the Twenty-first Century, Lexington.
  • Conesa-Sevilla, J. 2005. "The Realm of Continued Emergence: The Semiotics of George Herbert Mead and its Implications to Biosemiotics, Semiotics Matrix Theory, and Ecological Ethics." Sign Systems Studies (September). Estonia: Tartu University.
  • da Silva, Filipe Carreira. 2007. G.H. Mead. A Critical Introduction. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • — 2008. Mead and Modernity: Science, Selfhood and Democratic Politics. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
  • Gillespie, Alex. 2001. "" (Essays in Social Psychology book review). Theory & Psychology 13(3):422–24. Archived from the original 17 June 2010.
  • — 2005. "G. H. Mead: Theorist of the social act."[permanent dead link] Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 35:19–39.
  • — 2006. "Games and the development of perspective taking."[permanent dead link] Human Development 49:87–92.
  • Joas, Hans. 1985. G.H. Mead: A Contemporary Re-examination of His Thought. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Habermas, Jürgen. 1992. "Individuation through socialization: On George Herbert Mead's theory of socialization." in Postmetaphysical Thinking, by J. Habermas, translated by W. M. Hohengarten. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Honneth, Axel. 1996. "Recognition and socialization: Mead's naturalistic transformation of Hegel's idea." Struggle for Recognition: The Moral Grammar of Social Conflicts, by A. Honneth, translated by J. Anderson. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Lewis, J. D. 1979 "A social behaviorist interpretation of the Meadian 'I'." American Journal of Sociology 85:261–87.
  • Lundgren, D. C. 2004. "Social feedback and self-appraisals: Current status of the Mead-Cooley hypothesis." Symbolic Interaction 27:267–86.
  • Miller, David L. 1973 G. H. Mead: Self, Language and the World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Nungesser, Frithjof. 2016. "Mead Meets Tomasello. Pragmatism, the Cognitive Sciences, and the Origins of Human Communication and Sociality" in: The Timeliness of George Herbert Mead. Ed. by H. Joas and D. R. Huebner. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 252-275.
  • Nungesser, Frithjof. 2020. "The Social Evolution of Perspective-taking. Mead, Tomasello, and the Development of Human Agency" Pragmatism Today, 11(1): 84–105.
  • Sánchez de la Yncera, Ignacio. 1994. La Mirada Reflexiva de G.H. Mead. Montalbán, ES: Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas.
  • Shalin, Dmitri. 1988. "G. H. Mead, socialism, and the progressive agenda." American Journal of Sociology 93:913–51.

External links

  • Works by or about George Herbert Mead at Internet Archive
  • Works by George Herbert Mead at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by George Herbert Mead at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Mead Project 2.0 — Mead's published and unpublished writings, many of which are available online, along with others.
  • George Herbert Mead — Mitchell Aboulafia, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Guide to the George Herbert Mead Papers 1855-1968 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

george, herbert, mead, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, marc. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources George Herbert Mead news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message George Herbert Mead February 27 1863 April 26 1931 was an American philosopher sociologist and psychologist primarily affiliated with the University of Chicago where he was one of several distinguished pragmatists He is regarded as one of the founders of symbolic interactionism and of what has come to be referred to as the Chicago sociological tradition George Herbert MeadBorn 1863 02 27 February 27 1863South Hadley Massachusetts USDiedApril 26 1931 1931 04 26 aged 68 Chicago Illinois USAlma materOberlin CollegeHarvard UniversityNotable workMind Self and SocietyEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolPragmatismInstitutionsUniversity of MichiganUniversity of ChicagoInfluences Josiah Royce 1 John DeweyWilhelm WundtWilliam JamesCharles CooleyInfluenced Herbert BlumerJohn DeweyJurgen HabermasEugene HaltonC Wright MillsCharles W MorrisH Richard Niebuhr Contents 1 Biography 2 Theory 2 1 Pragmatism and symbolic interaction 2 2 Social philosophy behaviorism 2 2 1 Social acts 2 3 Nature of the self 2 4 Philosophy of science 2 5 Play and game and the generalized other 3 Writings 3 1 Bibliography 3 1 1 Collected volumes posthumous 3 1 2 Notable papers 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditGeorge Herbert Mead was born February 27 1863 in South Hadley Massachusetts He was raised in a Protestant middle class family comprising his father Hiram Mead his mother Elizabeth Storrs Mead nee Billings and his sister Alice His father was a former Congregationalist pastor from a lineage of farmers and clergymen and who later held the chair in Sacred Rhetoric and Pastoral Theology at Oberlin College s theological seminary Elizabeth taught for two years at Oberlin College and subsequently from 1890 to 1900 served as president of Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley Massachusetts 2 In 1879 George Mead enrolled at the Oberlin Academy at Oberlin College and then the college itself graduating in 1883 with a Bachelor of Arts 3 After graduation Mead taught grade school for about four months For the following three years he worked as a surveyor for the Wisconsin Central Railroad Company In autumn 1887 Mead enrolled at Harvard University where his main interests were philosophy and psychology At Harvard Mead studied with Josiah Royce a major influence upon his thought and William James whose children he tutored In 1888 Mead left Harvard after receiving only a B A and moved to Leipzig Germany to study with psychologist Wilhelm Wundt from whom he learned the concept of the gesture which would become central to his later work In 1891 Mead married Helen Kingsbury Castle 1860 1929 the sister of Henry Northrup Castle 1862 1895 a friend he met at Oberlin 4 Despite never finishing his dissertation Mead was able to obtain a post at the University of Michigan in 1891 There Mead met Charles H Cooley and John Dewey both of whom would influence him greatly 5 In 1894 Mead moved along with Dewey to the University of Chicago where he taught until his death Dewey s influence led Mead into educational theory but his thinking soon diverged from that of Dewey and developed into his famous psychological theories of mind self and society 6 352 53 No detached philosopher he was active in Chicago s social and political affairs his many activities include work for the City Club of Chicago Mead believed that science could be used to deal with social problems and played a key role in conducting research at the settlement house in Chicago 7 6 353 He also worked as treasurer for Chicago s Hull House 8 9 Mead died of heart failure on April 26 1931 Theory EditPragmatism and symbolic interaction Edit Main articles Pragmatism and Symbolic interactionism Much of Mead s work focused on the development of the self and the objectivity of the world within the social realm he insisted that the individual mind can exist only in relation to other minds with shared meanings 10 5 The two most important roots of Mead s work and of symbolic interactionism in general are the philosophy of pragmatism and social behaviorism Social behaviorism as opposed to psychological behaviorism refers to Mead s concern of the stimuli of gestures and social objects with rich meanings rather than bare physical objects which psychological behaviourists considered stimuli Pragmatism is a wide ranging philosophical position from which several aspects of Mead s influences can be identified into four main tenets 11 True reality does not exist out there in the real world it is actively created as we act in and toward the world People remember and base their knowledge of the world on what has been useful to them and are likely to alter what no longer works People define the social and physical objects they encounter in the world according to their use for them If we want to understand actors we must base that understanding on what people actually do Three of these ideas are critical to symbolic interactionism the focus on the interaction between the actor and the world a view of both the actor and the world as dynamic processes and not static structures and the actor s ability to interpret the social world Thus to Mead and symbolic interactionists consciousness is not separated from action and interaction but is an integral part of both Symbolic interactionism as a pragmatic philosophy was an antecedent to the philosophy of transactionalism 12 Mead s theories in part based on pragmatism and behaviorism were transmitted to many graduate students at the University of Chicago who then went on to establish symbolic interactionism 6 347 50 13 Social philosophy behaviorism Edit Mead was a very important figure in 20th century social philosophy One of his most influential ideas was the emergence of mind and self from the communication process between organisms discussed in Mind Self and Society 1934 also known as social behaviorism 14 This concept of how the mind and self emerge from the social process of communication by signs founded the symbolic interactionist school of sociology Rooted intellectually in Hegelian dialectics and process philosophy Mead like John Dewey developed a more materialist process philosophy that was based upon human action and specifically communicative action Human activity is in a pragmatic sense the criterion of truth and through human activity meaning is made Joint activity including communicative activity is the means through which our sense of self is constituted The essence of Mead s social behaviorism is that mind is not a substance located in some transcendent realm nor is it merely a series of events that takes place within the human physiological structure This approach opposed the traditional view of the mind as separate from the body The emergence of mind is contingent upon interaction between the human organism and its social environment it is through participation in the social act of communication that individuals realize their potential for significantly symbolic behavior that is thought Mind in Mead s terms is the individualized focus of the communication process It is linguistic behavior on the part of the individual There is then no mind or thought without language and language the content of mind is only a development and product of social interaction 15 191 92 Thus mind is not reducible to the neurophysiology of the organic individual but is emergent in the dynamic ongoing social process 15 7 that constitutes human experience 16 For Mead mind arises out of the social act of communication Mead s concept of the social act is relevant not only to his theory of mind but to all facets of his social philosophy His theory of mind self and society is in effect a philosophy of the act from the standpoint of a social process involving the interaction of many individuals just as his theory of knowledge and value is a philosophy of the act from the standpoint of the experiencing individual in interaction with an environment 16 Action is very important to his social theory and according to Mead actions also occur within a communicative process The initial phase of an act constitutes a gesture A gesture is a preparatory movement that enables other individuals to become aware of the intentions of the given organism The rudimentary situation is a conversation of gestures in which a gesture on the part of the first individual evokes a preparatory movement on the part of the second and the gesture of the second organism in turn calls out a response in the first person On this level no communication occurs Neither organism is aware of the effect of its own gestures upon the other the gestures are nonsignificant For communication to take place each organism must have knowledge of how the other individual will respond to its own ongoing act Here the gestures are significant symbols 14 A significant symbol is a kind of gesture that only humans can make i Gestures become significant symbols when they arouse in the individual who is making them the same kind of response they are supposed to elicit from those to whom the gestures are addressed Only when we have significant symbols can we truly have communication 6 356 57 Mead grounded human perception in an action nexus 17 148 We perceive the world in terms of the means of living 10 120 To perceive food is to perceive eating To perceive a house is to perceive shelter That is to say perception is in terms of action Mead s theory of perception is similar to that of J J Gibson Social acts Edit Mead argued in tune with Durkheim that the individual is a product of an ongoing pre existing society or more specifically of social interaction that is a consequence of a sui generis society The self arises when the individual becomes an object to themself Mead argued that we are objects first to other people and secondarily we become objects to ourselves by taking the perspective of other people Language enables us to talk about ourselves in the same way as we talk about other people and thus through language we become other to ourselves 18 In joint activity which Mead called social acts humans learn to see themselves from the standpoint of their co actors A central mechanism within the social act which enables perspective taking is position exchange People within a social act often alternate social positions e g giving receiving asking helping winning losing hiding seeking talking listening In children s games there is repeated position exchange for example in hide and seek and Mead argued that this is one of the main ways that perspective taking develops However for Mead unlike Dewey and J J Gibson the key is not simply human action but rather social action In humans the manipulatory phase of the act is socially mediated that is to say in acting towards objects humans simultaneously take the perspectives of others toward that object This is what Mead means by the social act as opposed to simply the act the latter being a Deweyan concept Non human animals also manipulate objects but that is a non social manipulation they do not take the perspective of other organisms toward the object Humans on the other hand take the perspective of other actors towards objects and this is what enables complex human society and subtle social coordination In the social act of economic exchange for example both buyer and seller must take each other s perspectives toward the object being exchanged The seller must recognize the value for the buyer while the buyer must recognize the desirability of money for the seller Only with this mutual perspective taking can the economic exchange occur Mead was influenced on this point by Adam Smith Nature of the self Edit Main article I and the me A final piece of Mead s social theory is the mind as the individual importation of the social process 15 178 79 Mead states that the self is a social process meaning that there are series of actions that go on in the mind to help formulate one s complete self As previously discussed Mead presented the self and the mind in terms of a social process As gestures are taken in by the individual organism the individual organism also takes in the collective attitudes of others in the form of gestures and reacts accordingly with other organized attitudes 15 178 79 This process is characterized by Mead as the I and the Me The Me is the social self and the I is the response to the Me In other words the I is the response of an individual to the attitudes of others while the Me is the organized set of attitudes of others which an individual assumes 19 15 174 86 Mead develops William James distinction between the I and the Me The Me is the accumulated understanding of the generalized other i e how one thinks one s group perceives oneself and so on The I is the individual s impulses The I is self as subject the Me is self as object The I is the knower the Me is the known The mind or stream of thought is the self reflective movements of the interaction between the I and the Me There is neither I nor Me in the conversation of gestures the whole act is not yet carried out but the preparation takes place in this field of gesture 15 175 These dynamics go beyond selfhood in a narrow sense and form the basis of a theory of human cognition For Mead the thinking process is the internalized dialogue between the I and the Me Mead rooted the self s perception and meaning deeply and sociologically in a common praxis of subjects found specifically in social encounters 17 166 Understood as a combination of the I and the Me Mead s self proves to be noticeably entwined within a sociological existence For Mead existence in community comes before individual consciousness First one must participate in the different social positions within society and only subsequently can one use that experience to take the perspective of others and thus become conscious Philosophy of science Edit Mead was a major American philosopher by virtue of being along with John Dewey Charles Peirce and William James one of the founders of pragmatism He also made significant contributions to the philosophies of nature science and history to philosophical anthropology and to process philosophy Dewey and Alfred North Whitehead considered Mead a thinker of the first rank He is a classic example of a social theorist whose work does not fit easily within conventional disciplinary boundaries In his work on philosophy of science Mead sought to find the psychological origin of science in the efforts of individuals to attain power over their environment The notion of a physical object arises out of manipulatory experience There is a social relation to inanimate objects for the organism takes the role of things that it manipulates directly or that it manipulates indirectly in perception For example in taking introjecting or imitating the resistant role of a solid object an individual obtains cognition of what is inside nonliving things Historically the concept of the physical object arose from an animistic conception of the universe Contact experience includes experiences of position balance and support and these are used by the organism when it creates its conceptions of the physical world Our scientific concepts of space time and mass are abstracted from manipulatory experience Such concepts as that of the electron are also derived from manipulation In developing a science we construct hypothetical objects in order to assist ourselves in controlling nature The conception of the present as a distinct unit of experience rather than as a process of becoming and disappearing is a scientific fiction devised to facilitate exact measurement In the scientific worldview immediate experience is replaced by theoretical constructs The ultimate in experience however is the manipulation and contact at the completion of an act 14 Play and game and the generalized other Edit Mead theorized that human beings begin their understanding of the social world through play and game Play comes first in the child s development The child takes different roles that he she observes in adult society and plays them out to gain an understanding of the different social roles For instance a child may first play the role of police officer and then the role of thief while playing Cops and Robbers and play the roles of doctor and patient when playing Doctor As a result of such play the child learns to become both subject and object and begins to become able to build a self However it is a limited self because the child can only take the role of distinct and separate others they still lack a more general and organized sense of themself 6 360 In the next stage the game stage it is required that a person develop a full sense of self Whereas in the play stage the child takes on the role of distinct others in the game stage the child must take on the role of everyone else involved in the game Furthermore these roles must have a definite relationship to one another To illustrate the game stage Mead gives his famous example of a baseball game 15 151 But in a game where a number of individuals are involved then the child taking one role must be ready to take the role of everyone else If he gets in a ball nine he must have the responses of each position involved in his own position He must know what everyone else is going to do in order to carry out his own play He has to take all of these roles They do not all have to be present in consciousness at the same time but at some moments he has to have three or four individuals present in his own attitude such as the one who is going to throw the ball the one who is going to catch it and so on These responses must be in some degree present in his own make up In the game then there is a set of responses of such others so organized that the attitude of one calls out the appropriate attitudes of the other In the game stage organization begins and definite personalities start to emerge Children begin to become able to function in organized groups and most importantly to determine what they will do within a specific group 6 360 61 Mead calls this the child s first encounter with the generalized other which is one of the main concepts that Mead proposes for understanding the emergence of the social self in human beings The generalized other can be thought of as understanding the given activity and the actors place within the activity from the perspective of all the others engaged in the activity Through understanding the generalized other the individual understands what kind of behavior is expected appropriate and so on in different social settings Some may find that social acts e g games and routine forms of social interaction enable perspective taking through position exchange 20 Assuming that games and routine social acts have differentiated social positions and that these positions create our cognitive perspectives then it might be that by moving between roles in a game e g between hiding and seeking or buying and selling we come to learn about the perspective of the other This new interpretation of Mead s account of taking the perspective of the other has experimental support 21 Other recent publications argue that Mead s account of the development of perspective taking is relevant not only with respect to human ontogeny but also to the evolution of human sociality 22 Writings EditIn a career spanning more than 40 years Mead wrote almost constantly and published numerous articles and book reviews in both philosophy and psychology However he did not publish any books Following his death several of his students put together and edited four volumes from records of Mead s social psychology course at the University of Chicago his lecture notes Mead s Carus Lectures 1930 edited by Charles W Morris and his numerous unpublished papers In his lifetime Mead published around 100 scholarly articles reviews and incidental pieces Given their diverse nature access to these writings is difficult The first editorial efforts to change this situation date from the 1960s In 1964 Andrew J Reck collected twenty five of Mead s published articles in Selected Writings George Herbert Mead 23 16 Four years later John W Petras published George Herbert Mead Essays on his Social Psychology a collection of fifteen articles that included previously unpublished manuscripts More recently Mary Jo Deegan 2001 published Essays in Social Psychology a book project originally abandoned by Mead in the early 1910s 24 In 2010 Filipe Carreira da Silva edited G H Mead A Reader a comprehensive collection including thirty of Mead s most important articles ten of them previously unpublished 25 Likewise the Mead Project at Brock University in Toronto intends to publish all of Mead s 80 odd remaining unpublished manuscripts 26 Bibliography Edit Collected volumes posthumous Edit 1932 The Philosophy of the Present 27 1934 Mind Self and Society 15 1936 Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century 28 1938 The Philosophy of the Act 29 1964 Selected Writings 30 This volume collects articles Mead himself prepared for publication 1982 The Individual and the Social Self Unpublished Essays by G H Mead 31 2001 Essays in Social Psychology 24 2010 G H Mead A Reader 25 Notable papers Edit Suggestions Towards a Theory of the Philosophical Disciplines 1900 32 Social Consciousness and the Consciousness of Meaning 1910 33 What Social Objects Must Psychology Presuppose 1910 34 The Mechanism of Social Consciousness 1912 35 The Social Self 1913 36 Scientific Method and the Individual Thinker 1917 37 A Behavioristic Account of the Significant Symbol 1922 38 The Genesis of Self and Social Control 1925 39 The Objective Reality of Perspectives 1926 40 The Nature of the Past 1929 41 and The Philosophies of Royce James and Dewey in Their American Setting 1929 42 See also EditJames Mark Baldwin Lev Vygotsky Chicago School sociology Notes Edit This has been a contentious issue in the burgeoning field of Human Animal Studies For a discussion see Wilkie Rhoda and Andrew McKinnon 2013 George Herbert Mead on Humans and Other Animals Social Relations after Human Animal Studies Sociological Research Online 18 4 19 References Edit David L Miller Josiah Royce and George H Mead on the Nature of the Self Transactions of the Charles S Peirce Society Summer 1975 vol XI no 2 p 67 89 Baldwin John 2009 George Herbert Mead Sage p 7 ISBN 978 0 8039 2320 1 George herbert mead Cook Gary A 1993 George Herbert Mead the making of a social pragmatist University of Illinois Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 252 06272 8 Miller David 2009 George Herbert Mead Self Language and the World University of Texas Press pp xii xix ISBN 978 0 292 72700 7 a b c d e f Ritzer George 2008 Sociological Theory McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 352818 2 George H Mead 1907 The Social Settlement Its basis and function University of Chicago Record 108 110 Ritzer George 2004 Encyclopedia of Social Theory Thousand Oaks California SAGE Publications p 491 ISBN 0 7619 2611 9 George Herbert Mead Philosophy www lib uchicago edu 2003 Archived from the original on 2020 11 24 a b Mead George Herbert 1982 The Individual and the Social Self Unpublished Essays by G H Mead edited by D L Miller Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 608 09479 3 McDermid Douglas Pragmatism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ISSN 2161 0002 Phillips Trevor J Tibbels Kirkland Patterson John 2015 Transactionalism An Historical and Interpretive Study 2 ed Influence Ecology p 54 Archived from the original on 2016 09 24 Nungesser Frithjof 2021 Pragmatism and Interaction In Routledge International Handbook of Interactionism edited by Dirk Vom Lehn Natalia Ruiz Junco and Will Gibson London New York Routledge 25 36 ISBN 9780367227708 a b c Desmonde William H 2006 1967 Mead George Herbert 1863 1931 In Borchert Donald M ed Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 6 Macmillan Reference pp 79 82 ISBN 0 02 865786 1 a b c d e f g h Mead George Herbert 1967 1934 Mind Self and Society edited by C W Morris Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 51668 4 a b c Cronk George 2005 George Herbert Mead in Fieser James Dowden Bradley eds The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy a b Joas Hans 1985 George Herbert Mead A Contemporary Re examination of His Thought Cambridge MA MIT Press Gillespie Alex 2006 Becoming Other From Social Interaction to Self Reflection Information Age Publishing ISBN 978 1 59311 230 1 Margolis Joseph Jacques Catudal 2001 The Quarrel between Invariance and Flux Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press Alex Gillespie 2012 Position exchange The social development of agency New Ideas in Psychology 30 1 32 46 doi 10 1016 j newideapsych 2010 03 004 Alex Gillespie 2011 Exchanging social positions Enhancing intersubjective coordination within a joint task European Journal of Social Psychology 41 608 616 doi 10 1002 ejsp 788 Nungesser Frithjof The Social Evolution of Perspective taking Mead Tomasello and the Development of Human Agency PDF Pragmatism Today 11 84 105 Selected Writings George Herbert Mead Bobbs Merrill The Liberal Arts Press 1964 a b Mead George Herbert 2001 c 1910s Essays in Social Psychology edited by M J Deegan New Brunswick NJ Transaction ISBN 0 765 80082 9 a b da Silva Filipe Carreira ed 2010 G H Mead A Reader London Routledge The Mead Project at Brock University Mead George Herbert 1932 The Philosophy of the Present Open Court Publishing Mead George Herbert 1936 Movements of Thought in the Nineteenth Century edited by Merritt H Moore Chicago University of Chicago Press Mead George Herbert 1938 The Philosophy of the Act edited by C W Morris et al Chicago University of Chicago Press Reck Andrew J ed 1964 Selected Writings George Herbert Mead Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 51671 4 Miller David L ed 1982 The Individual and the Social Self Unpublished Essays by G H Mead Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 608 09479 3 1 Suggestions Towards a Theory of the Philosophical Disciplines 1900 2 Social Consciousness and the Consciousness of Meaning 1910 3 What Social Objects Must Psychology Presuppose 1910 4 The Mechanism of Social Consciousness Mead George Herbert 1913 The Social Self Journal of Philosophy Psychology and Scientific Methods 10 374 80 via Classics in the History of Psychology transcribed by C D Green Toronto York University Also available via The Mead Project Toronto Brock University 5 Scientific Method and the Individual Thinker 1917 6 A Behavioristic Account of the Significant Symbol 1922 George Herbert Mead The Genesis of the Self and Social Control Brocku ca Retrieved 2013 08 01 George Herbert Mead The Objective Reality of Perspectives Brocku ca Retrieved 2013 08 01 George Herbert Mead The Nature of the Past Brocku ca Retrieved 2013 08 01 George Herbert Mead The Philosophies of Royce James and Dewey in their American setting Brocku ca Retrieved 2013 08 01 Further reading EditAboulafia Mitchell ed 1991 Philosophy Social Theory and the Thought of George Herbert Mead Albany SUNY Press 2001 The Cosmopolitan Self George Herbert Mead and Continental Philosophy Chicago University of Illinois Press Biesta Gert and Daniel Trohler ed 2008 G H Mead the Philosophy of Education Boulder CO Paradigm Publishers ISBN 9781594515309 Blumer H amp Morrione T J 2004 George Herbert Mead and Human Conduct New York Altamira Press Burke Thomas and Skowronski Krzysztof Piotr eds 2013 George Herbert Mead in the Twenty first Century Lexington Conesa Sevilla J 2005 The Realm of Continued Emergence The Semiotics of George Herbert Mead and its Implications to Biosemiotics Semiotics Matrix Theory and Ecological Ethics Sign Systems Studies September Estonia Tartu University da Silva Filipe Carreira 2007 G H Mead A Critical Introduction Cambridge Polity Press 2008 Mead and Modernity Science Selfhood and Democratic Politics Lanham MD Lexington Books Gillespie Alex 2001 The Mystery of G H Mead s First Book Essays in Social Psychology book review Theory amp Psychology 13 3 422 24 Archived from the original 17 June 2010 2005 G H Mead Theorist of the social act permanent dead link Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 35 19 39 2006 Games and the development of perspective taking permanent dead link Human Development 49 87 92 Joas Hans 1985 G H Mead A Contemporary Re examination of His Thought Cambridge MA MIT Press Habermas Jurgen 1992 Individuation through socialization On George Herbert Mead s theory of socialization in Postmetaphysical Thinking by J Habermas translated by W M Hohengarten Cambridge MA MIT Press Honneth Axel 1996 Recognition and socialization Mead s naturalistic transformation of Hegel s idea Struggle for Recognition The Moral Grammar of Social Conflicts by A Honneth translated by J Anderson Cambridge MA MIT Press Lewis J D 1979 A social behaviorist interpretation of the Meadian I American Journal of Sociology 85 261 87 Lundgren D C 2004 Social feedback and self appraisals Current status of the Mead Cooley hypothesis Symbolic Interaction 27 267 86 Miller David L 1973 G H Mead Self Language and the World Chicago University of Chicago Press Nungesser Frithjof 2016 Mead Meets Tomasello Pragmatism the Cognitive Sciences and the Origins of Human Communication and Sociality in The Timeliness of George Herbert Mead Ed by H Joas and D R Huebner Chicago The University of Chicago Press 252 275 Nungesser Frithjof 2020 The Social Evolution of Perspective taking Mead Tomasello and the Development of Human Agency Pragmatism Today 11 1 84 105 Sanchez de la Yncera Ignacio 1994 La Mirada Reflexiva de G H Mead Montalban ES Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas Shalin Dmitri 1988 G H Mead socialism and the progressive agenda American Journal of Sociology 93 913 51 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to George Herbert Mead Works by or about George Herbert Mead at Internet Archive Works by George Herbert Mead at Project Gutenberg Works by George Herbert Mead at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Mead Project 2 0 Mead s published and unpublished writings many of which are available online along with others George Herbert Mead Mitchell Aboulafia Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Review materials for studying George Herbert Mead Guide to the George Herbert Mead Papers 1855 1968 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Herbert Mead amp oldid 1151573672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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