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La centralità dell'adattamento: emozioni primarie, funzionamento motivazionale e moralità tra neuroscienze, psicologia evoluzionistica e Control-Mastery Theory
Emma De Luca, Cristina Mazza, Francesco Gazzillo
Rassegna di PsicologiaVol. XXXVI, Issue 1.0
19/01/2018
Articolo Nazionale
Introduzione
Control-Mastery Theory (CMT) is a cognitive-psychodynamic-relational theory of mental functioning, psychopathology and psychotherapy developed by Joseph Weiss (1993) and empirically studied by the San Francisco Psychotherapy Research Group (Weiss, Sampson, & The Mount Zion Psychotherapy Research Group, 1986). The central hypotheses of CMT are: the humans being's motivation to adapt to reality, their unconscious ability to execute higher mental functions and the importance of pro-social motivations and interpersonal guilt in normal and pathological mental functioning. The aim of this paper is to provide a review of the most important neuroscientific studies, along with both evolutionary and cognitive psychology researches that support these hypotheses. These studies showed how the evolution of species have been producing a series of behavioral systems, evolutionary based but “environmentally labile” which, overall, have promoted individuals and groups' survival and reproduction. To adapt to our own primary group, each of us builds a reliable set of beliefs about our surrounding world and about “moral rules” that govern relationships. Psychopathology can be seen as the expression of beliefs that had facilitated the adaptation of the child to a traumatic environment but have then revealed to be maladaptive because of the changing circumstances. Key-words: Control-Mastery Theory; adaptation; motivational system; morality.
Contenuto Completo
Pubblichiamo il papers "La centralità dell'adattamento: emozioni primarie, funzionamento motivazionale e moralità tra neuroscienze, psicologia evoluzionistica e Control-Mastery Theory" di Emma De Luca, Cristina Mazza e Francesco Gazzillo apparso su «Rassegna di Psicologia n. 1, vol. XXXVI, 2017».