Document Type
|
:
|
BL
|
Record Number
|
:
|
581546
|
Doc. No
|
:
|
b410765
|
Main Entry
|
:
|
Cohen-Cole, Jamie Nace,1972-
|
Title & Author
|
:
|
The open mind : : Cold War politics and the sciences of human nature /\ Jamie Cohen-Cole
|
Page. NO
|
:
|
397 pages :: illustrations ;; 24 cm
|
ISBN
|
:
|
9780226092164
|
|
:
|
: 022609216x
|
|
:
|
9780226092331
|
Bibliographies/Indexes
|
:
|
Includes bibliographical references (pages 341-384) and index
|
Contents
|
:
|
Democratic minds for a complex society -- The creative American -- Interdisciplinarity as a virtue -- The academy as model of America -- Scientists as the model of human nature -- Instituting cognitive science -- Cognitive theory and the making of liberal Americans -- A fractured politics of human nature -- Conclusion: the history of the open mind
|
Abstract
|
:
|
"The Open Mind chronicles the development and promulgation of a scientific vision of the rational, creative, and autonomous self, demonstrating how this self became a defining feature of Cold War culture. Jamie Cohen-Cole illustrates how from 1945 to 1965 policy makers and social critics used the idea of an open-minded human nature to advance centrist politics. They reshaped intellectual culture and instigated nationwide educational reform that promoted more open, and indeed more human, minds. The new field of cognitive science was central to this project, as it used popular support for open-mindedness to overthrow the then-dominant behaviorist view that the mind either could not be studied scientifically or did not exist. Cognitive science also underwrote the political implications of the open mind by treating it as the essential feature of human nature. While the open mind unified America in the first two decades after World War II, between 1965 and 1975 battles over the open mind fractured American culture as the ties between political centrism and the scientific account of human nature began to unravel. During the late 1960s, feminists and the New Left repurposed Cold War era psychological tools to redefine open-mindedness as a characteristic of left-wing politics. As a result, once-liberal intellectuals became neoconservative, and in the early 1970s, struggles against open-mindedness gave energy and purpose to the right wing."--Publisher's Web site
|
Subject
|
:
|
Human behavior models-- Political aspects-- United States
|
Subject
|
:
|
Cognitive science-- Political aspects-- United States
|
Subject
|
:
|
Social sciences-- Political aspects-- United States
|
Subject
|
:
|
Social sciences-- United States-- History-- 20th century
|
LC Classification
|
:
|
BF39.3.C645 2014
|