Linear List: Publications in preparation

Publications in Preparation (journal articles)

Enactive Cognitive Science and Neurophenomenology
 
Toward a Sustainable Humanity: A Theoretical and Practical Model for the Generation of Viable, Meaningful and Embodied Action
 
The Embodied Mind: A Review
 
A Review of Enactive Cognitive Science: 20 Years Since The Embodied Mind.
 
Enactive Cognitive Science, Neurophenomenology and the Social Sciences: What This Exchange Could Offer
 
Enactive Intersubjectivity: Communication as an Intersubjective Embodied Action
 
Sanction: An Extension to the Taxonomy of Empathy
 
Assessing the Direction of Present Neurophenomenological Research: What did Varela Intend by the Neuro in Neuro-phenomenology?
 
Can Neurophenomenology Provide the Basis for an Interdisciplinary Scientific Phenomenology?
 
Methodology and Method
 
Ensuring Researcher Health and Safety in Psycho-phenomenological Research of Pathological Experience: Negotiating the Empathy of the Second-person Position
 
Pragmatic and Theoretical Considerations for the Researcher of Suffering
 
Achieving the Saturation of Meaning within Qualitative Interviews: An Approach to the Process and Definition of Saturation
 
The Symbolisation of Phenomenal Invariants: How Greimasian Semiotics can provide the Theoretical and Practical Tools for the Symbolisation of Phenomenological Invariants derived from Text and Other Medium
 
Greimasian Semiotics as a Tool for the Formalisation of Structure in Experience
 
Using Cluster Analysis and the Graph Theoretical Modeling of Phenomenal Invariants in Qualitative Research:  The Theory and an Example of its Practical Application
 
Category Theory as a Foundation for the Mathematisation of Phenomenology: New Tools with which to Speak to Husserl
 
The 7th Step: Extending Gendlin’s Focusing Process to Initiate Viable, Meaningful, Sustainable and Environmentally Appropriate, Embodied Client Actions
 
Health
 
Operating Beyond Reductionism in the Assessment and Treatment of Psychosomatic and Functional Disorders: Theoretical Tools from Gendlin, Mahayana Buddhism, Enactive Cognitive Science and Complex System Theory
 
Somatisation in Psychosomatic and Functional Disorders: Reassessing the Assumption of Pathology
 
Applying Neurophenomenology to Somatisation and the Psychosomatic
 
What is Suffering? Applying Prasangika Thought to Understanding Processes of Somatisation and Psychosomatic Illness
 
Towards a Science of Wellness: A Practical Example of How Researching Recovery was Necessary to an Accurate Assessment of Illness and Health
 
Towards a Science of Wellness: Know-How and Know-What: How it is Necessary to Use both Operational and Propositional Knowledge
 
Towards a Science of Wellness: What can Prasangika Thought Tell Us About Suffering and Wellness?
 
Process Knowledge: A Necessary Tool for the Research of Health and Wellness 
 
Process Knowledge: A Necessary Tool for the Research of Chronic Illness
 
Process Knowledge: A Necessary Tool for the Research of the Psychosomatic, Somatisation and Functional Somatic Syndromes
 
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
 
A Critical Review of the Literature on CFS in Females: Girls and Women
 
Reassessing the Diagnostic Criteria for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome on the Basis of New Phenomenological Evidence
 
Key Components to Management and Treatment Programmes for CFS
 
A Treatment Programme Manual for Therapeutic Interventions in Adults with CFS
 
An Assessment of the Successful Treatment of 5 Adult CFS Clients Using Traditional Individual Consultation and Virtual Technologies
 
A New Look at the Neurological Correlates of CFS
 
A Portrait of the Experience of CFS from the Perspective of the Ill and Recovered Participant
 
Searching for Solutions and Making Sense of CFS from the Perspective of the Ill and Recovered Client
 
CFS: Relating to the Illness from the Perspective of the Ill and Recovered Participant
 
CFS and the Possibility of Recovery from the Perspective of the Ill Participant
 
Key Components to Recovering from CFS from the Perspective of the Recovered Participant
 
The Dis-integration of Self and Action during Illness: An Assessment of Ill and Recovered Participant Experiences
 
The Re-integration of Self and Action in Recovering from CFS: An Assessment of Ill and Recovered Participant Experiences
 
Evidence for the Efficacy of Meditative Techniques in Promoting Recovery from CFS
 
Energy and Action in CFS from the Perspective of the Ill and Recovered Participant
 
RELATED ARTICLESExplain
PhD1
Linear List: Publications in preparation
Consequent Research
Description of the Action Model
Graph structuring and definitions
1. Introduction
10. Recovery and the Self
11. "Energy"
12. Discussion and Conclusions
2. Literature Review
3. The Problematic
4. An Enactive Architecture of Conscious Experience
5. Theoretical Background to the Methodology
6. Methodology
7. Method
8. An Overview of the Experience of CFS
9. Action and Self Dis-integration
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