Dílo Gregory Batesona v kontextu současné kulturologie
The work of Gregory Bateson in the context of contemporary culturology
diplomová práce (OBHÁJENO)
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Trvalý odkaz
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/13466Identifikátory
SIS: 50089
Kolekce
- Kvalifikační práce [23778]
Autor
Vedoucí práce
Oponent práce
Soukup, Martin
Fakulta / součást
Filozofická fakulta
Obor
Kulturologie
Katedra / ústav / klinika
Ústav etnologie
Datum obhajoby
19. 9. 2007
Nakladatel
Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaJazyk
Čeština
Známka
Výborně
Cílem této práce je tak předvedení způsobu, jakým Bateson konceptualizoval tématické okruhy relevantní pro současnou kulturologii s akcentem na jeho přínos pro sociokulturní antropologii, psychologii kultury, kulturní ekologii, biokulturologii a filozofii člověka a kultury. Domnívám se, že Batesonův způsob myšlení odhalující souvislosti napříč různými popisnými úrovněmi sociokulturní reality může být inspirativní pro jakoukoli interdisciplinárně koncipovanou vědu o člověku.
The thesis is an attempt to relate the work of Gregory Bateson to the concept of culturology as it is being developed at the Department of Cultural Studies at the Faculty of Philosophy and Arts at Charles University in Prague. It consists of three relatively independent parts each of them dealing with particular science with which Bateson was concerned - anthropology, psychology and ecology. In the first part, notions of function, cultural structure, ethos, eidos and schismogenesis are discussed. It is asserted that Bateson's anthropological work represents integration of British functionalism and American configurationism and that the concept of cultural structure anticipates French structuralism. The second part is concerned with Bateson's concepts developed during the forties and fifties which related mostly to psychological topics, especially his best known double bind theory. It also treats Russell's type theory that plays a central role in most of Bateson's works. And finally, the ecological part deals with Bateson's epistemology and evolutionary theory. In addition to his major epistemological notions - "a difference which makes a difference" and the fundamental distinction of Pleroma versus Creatura, which he borrowed from famous Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung - his picture of new...