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Encyclopedia > G. H. Mead

George Herbert Mead (February 27, 1863 - April 26, 1931) was a United States philosopher, sociologist and psychologist, who did much of his work at the University of Chicago as one of the founding members of the pragmatist school. He is regarded as the father of symbolic interactionism.


Mead, as a pioneering philosopher of social psychology, was instrumental in further developing the view that individuals are products of society, the self arising out of social experience as an object of socially symbolic gestures and interactions. Rooted intellectually in Hegelian dialectics, theories of action, and an amended "anti-Watsonian" social behaviourism, Mead’s self was a self of practical and pragmatic intentions. Mead, for example, grounded human perception in an "action-nexus" (Joas, 1985, p. 148), ingraining the individual in a "manipulatory phase of the act" as the fundamental “means of living” (Mead, 1982, p. 120). In this manipulatory sphere “the individual abides with the physical objects” of everyday life (Mead, 1938, p. 267). Mead also rooted the self’s “perception and meaning” (Joas, 1985, p. 166) deeply and sociologically in "a common praxis of subjects" (p. 166) found specifically in social encounters. Mead’s self, in other words, proves to be noticeably entwined within a sociological existence: For Mead, existence in community comes before individual consciousness. For more metaphysically and ontologically inspired philosophers like Heidegger (a European contemporary of Mead), the story was more about the development of Being from the perspective of the experiencing human being and how the world is revealed to this experiencing entity within a realm of things. For more pragmatic philosophers like Mead, the story is about the development of the self and the objectivity of the world within the social realm: that "[t]he individual mind can exist only in relation to other minds with shared meanings" (Miller, 1982, p. 5).


  Results from FactBites:
 
George Herbert Mead [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] (19314 words)
Mead's point is that all such reconstructions and interpretations of the past are grounded in a present that is opening into a future and that the time-conditioned nature and interests of historical thought made the construction of a purely "objective" historical account impossible.
Mead's description of the Romantics' reconstruction of self-consciousness on the basis of a reconstructed past is a concrete illustration of his conception of historical consciousness as developing with reference to a problematic present.
Mead's conception of historical consciousness is rooted in his view of intelligence as the reconstruction of human experience in response to "new situations." As has been shown earlier, Mead views the novel event as the basis of intelligent conduct.
George Herbert Mead: Definition and Much More From Answers.com (1440 words)
Mead's focus was the relationship between the self and society, particularly the emergence of the human self in the process of social interaction.
Mead is a major American philosopher by virtue of being, along with Charles Peirce, William James, and John Dewey, one of the founders of pragmatism.
Mead grounded human perception in an "action-nexus" (Joas 1985: 148), ingraining the individual in a "manipulatory phase of the act" as the fundamental “means of living” (Mead 1982: 120).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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