1. Surveying the imagination landscape; Part I. Theoretical Perspectives on the Imagination: 2. The evolution of a human imagination; 3. Material imagination: an anthropological perspective; 4. The archaeological imagination; 5. Philosophical perspectives on imagination in the Western tradition; 6. Imagination in classical India: a short introduction; 7. From prediction to imagination; 8. Memory and imagination: perspectives on constructive episodic simulation; 9. Capturing the imagination; 10. A sociocultural perspective on imagination; 11. Artificial intelligence and imagination; Part II. Imagery-Based Forms of Imagination: 12. The visual imagination; 13. Musical imagery; 14. Neurophysiological foundations and practical applications of motor imagery; 15. Temporal mental imagery; 16. Emotional mental imagery; 17. Multisensory perception and mental imagery; 18. Evocation: how mental imagery spans across the senses; Part III. Intentionality-Based Forms of Imagination: 19. Continuities and discontinuities between imagination and memory: the view from philosophy; 20. Imagining and experiencing the self on cognitive maps; 21. The neuroscience of imaginative thought: an integrative framework; 22. Imagination and self-referential thinking; 23. Imaginary friends: how imaginary minds mimic real life; 24. Imagination and moral cognition; 25. Moral reasoning: a network neuroscience perspective; 26. The future-directed functions of the imagination: from prediction to metaforesight; Part IV. Novel Combinatorial Forms of Imagination: 27. On the interaction between episodic and semantic representations: constructing a unified account of imagination; 28. How imagination supports narrative experiences for textual, audiovisual, and interactive narratives; 29. Development of the fantasy-reality distinction; 30. Imagining the real: Buddhist paths to wholeness in Tibet; 31. Hypothetical thinking; 32. The counterfactual imagination: the impact of alternatives to reality on morality; 33. A look back at pioneering theories of the creative brain; Part V. Phenomenology-Based Forms of Imagination: 34. Imagination in the philosophy of art; 35. Imagination in aesthetic experience; 36. The arts and human symbolic cognition: art is for social communication; 37. Aesthetic engagement: lessons from art history, neuroscience, and society; 38. Dance and the imagination: be a butterfly!; 39. Imagination, intersubjectivity and a musical therapeutic process: a personal narrative; Part VI. Altered States of Imagination: 40. Dreaming beyond imagination and perception; 41. Dreaming is imagination roaming freely, based on embodied simulation, and subserved by an unconstrained default network; 42. Aphantasia; 43. Hypnosis and imagination; 44. Hallucinations and imagination; 45. The psychiatry of imagination; 46. Meditation and imagination; 47. Flow in performance and creative cognition: an optimal state of task-based adaptation; 48. The force of the imagination.
Discover the human imagination - what it entails, how it evolved, and why it singularly defines us as a species.
Anna Abraham is the E. Paul Torrance Professor of Creativity and Gifted Education, and the Director of the Torrance Center for Creativity and Talent Development in the College of Education at the University of Georgia.
'This edited volume offers a unique combination of neuroscientific,
philosophical, psychological, anthropological, and historical
perspectives on imagination. All the contributors are acknowledged
masters of their respective disciplines, as well as excellent
writers to boot, which makes this handbook an indispensable
resource for anyone interested in this fascinating subject.'
Elkhonon Goldberg, Clinical Professor, New York University School
of Medicine
'This is a fantastic contribution to research on imagination. The
activity of imagining is invoked across a large range of otherwise
diverse human activities; it's therefore crucial that researchers
from different backgrounds talk to each other about it. This book
is a rich conversation from which anyone interested in the
imagination will learn a lot.' Kathleen Stock, University of
Sussex
'Anna Abraham's 'neurophilosophical' approach cultivates a holistic
understanding of imagination across cultures and disciplines. Her
five-fold framework provides a space for academic and applied
approaches to meet, thereby bringing the 'force of imagination' to
centre stage.' Gerald Cupchik, University of Toronto
'This handbook is an essential resource written by leading experts
in their respective fields from across the world. Each chapter
showcases a rich and detailed analysis about how the imagination is
understood across several disciplines of study, including
anthropology, archaeology, medicine, neuroscience, psychology,
philosophy and the arts.' Scott Barry Kaufman, University of
Pennsylvania
'No other handbook has collected contributions from philosophers,
psychologists, and neuroscientists of imagination in one place. In
doing so, this comprehensive work promises a perspective on the
imagination that transcends disciplinary perspectives and
boundaries. As such, it will surely be a resource for scholars of
imagination for years to come.' Shen-yi Liao, University of Puget
Sound, Washington
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