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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Business Administration and Economics→Psychology and Consciousness

In retrospect, I selected economics classes (microeconomics, macroeconomics, econometrics, financial economics, etc.) as all of my electives when I was an undergraduate student (my major was business administration, especially accounting, more specifically managerial accounting). Now, at JFKU, I selected consciousness classes as my all electives…Interestingly, my academic background is like below chart.
In a word, this is my joking, but my academic history could be called “integral.” What’s next? I totally understand what I’d like to pursue next.

Buddha's Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love, and Wisdom



This is a required book in neurophilosophy class at JFKU. This book encompasses plenty of topics about neuroscience. As the tile says, this book also covers many practices to train our brain. I recommend this book, but I feel something is missing in this book…Maybe I wanted to read about more neurophilosophical issues. 

Neurophilosophy and Neuroscience Video

The following videos are recommended by my teacher in neurophilosophy class. The second one may be a little monotonous, but it shows us our brain is a kind of “small universe.”
Brain Power
How the Human Brain Works


Postmodernism? Contribution and Limitation

As Wilber (2000) explains, modernism contributes to differentiation of art, morals, and science spheres which were regarded as undifferentiated sphere in pre-modernism. However, modernism includes some inherent limitations. From the modernism perspectives, the dominant belief is that it is possible to describe scientifically and logically all phenomena including subjective experiences. Furthermore, most modernists tend to believe that our reality is objective, and our world is based on materials.

As opposed to modernism, postmodernism came to the forefront. In a word, postmodernism is an antithesis of modernism, attempting to overcome the limitations in modernism. Also, a distinguishing characteristic in postmodernism is a relative worldview. In that sense, postmodernism is sometimes called as relativism.

As for the contribution of postmodernism, Wilber (1996) demonstrates: “the great postmodern discovery was that neither the self nor the world is simply pregiven, but rather they exist in contexts and backgrounds that have a history, a development” (p. 60).To put it in another way, postmodernism created a large philosophical map which embraces almost everything by acclaiming subsistent values in it. Therefore, the relativistic attribute in postmodernism is able to allow for the inclusion of additional paradigms.

Although postmodernism had a positive influence on many fields (e.g., philosophy, architecture, literature, music, etc.), it also includes innate limitations. In regard to this point, Mcintosh (2007) contends:
Postmodernism’s pathological fusion is found in the way that it fails to differentiate between the healthy aspects of the previous stagesaspects that we want to carry forward into the future and includeand the immature and pathological aspects of the previous stages that we would do well to leave behind. (p. 59)

              In other words, the potential weakness of postmodernism is that it can’t discern positive aspects from negative ones in previous stages. As a consequence, postmodernism tends to fall into an undesirable situation to include a flood of values without careful consideration.
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