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About The Book
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<p>In his provocative but critically acclaimed theory about the origin of introspectable mentality Julian Jaynes argued that until the late second millennium people possessed a different psychology: a &quot;two-chambered&quot; (bicameral) neurocultural arrangement in which a commanding &quot;god&quot; guided admonished and ordered about a listening &quot;mortal&quot; via voices visions and visitations. Out of the cauldron of civilizational collapse and chaos an adaptive self-reflexive consciousness emerged better suited to the pressures of larger more complex sociopolitical systems.</p><p>Though often described as boldly iconoclastic and far ahead of it time Jaynes&#39;s thinking actually resonates with a &quot;second&quot; or &quot;other&quot; psychological tradition that explores the cultural-historical evolution of psyche. Brian J. McVeigh a student of Jaynes points out the blind spots of mainstream establishment psychology by providing empirical support for Jaynes&#39;s ideas on sociohistorical shifts in cognition. He argues that from around 3500 to 1000 BCE the archaeological and historical record reveals features of hallucinatory super-religiosity in every known civilization. As social pressures eroded the god-centered authority of bicamerality an upgraded psychology of interiorized self-awareness arose during the Late Bronze Age Collapse. A key explanatory component of Jaynes&#39;s theorizing was how metaphors constructed a mental landscape populated with &quot;I&#39;s&quot; and &quot;me&#39;s&quot; that replaced a declining worldview dominated by gods ancestors and spirits. McVeigh statistically substantiates how linguo-conceptual changes reflected psychohistorical developments; because supernatural entities functioned in place of our inner selves vocabularies for psychological terms were strikingly limited in ancient languages. McVeigh also demonstrates the surprising ubiquity of &quot;hearing voices&quot; in modern times contending that hallucinations are bicameral vestiges and that mental imagery--a controllable semi-hallucinatory experience--is the successor to the divine hallucinations that once held societies together.</p><p>This thought-provoking work will appeal to anyone interested in the transformative power of metaphors the development of mental lexicons and the adaptive role of hallucinations.</p>