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The unconscious mind rules in absentia

机译:潜意识中的无意识统治

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This paper offers an unconscious encounter between the incompatible entities of a vulnerable human populace and a high-intensity storm. The setting is a typically human social situation, a city nestled on the Mississippi River between Lake Pontchartrain and the Gulf of Mexico. The discussion is with the deafly unconscious. The topic of discussion concerns the psychological constraints that tie humans to a particular 'place'. A place that conflicts with scientific reality but melds quite well with the rhetorical narrative before the event: 'it's happened before and it will happen again but we are still OK ... aren't we? The purpose of this paper is to (a) investigate the underlying impetus of why citizens choose to stay when threatened by an extreme climate event and (b) what can be learned in the aftermath. It is concluded here that rather than a failure of preparation or policy, or the pending promise of resilience, Hurricane Katrina's deadly assault can be more so attributed to how citizens mentally model extreme climate events. This paper is an extraction from a theoretical PhD dissertation on mental model theory and policy and planning, to be submitted September 2016.
机译:本文提供了弱势人群与高强度风暴的不相容实体之间的无意识相遇。该环境是典型的人类社会环境,一个城市坐落在庞恰特雷恩湖和墨西哥湾之间的密西西比河上。讨论是关于聋哑人的。讨论的主题涉及将人类绑定到特定“位置”的心理约束。这个地方与科学现实相矛盾,但与事件发生前的修辞叙事很好地融合在一起:“它发生在之前,它将再次发生,但我们还是可以的……不是吗?本文的目的是(a)研究公民为什么在受到极端气候事件威胁时选择留下的潜在动力,以及(b)可以从中学到的知识。在这里得出的结论是,卡特里娜飓风的致命袭击不是失败的准备或政策,也不是永无止境的复原力承诺,而更多地归因于公民在心理上模拟极端气候事件的方式。本文摘自将于2016年9月提交的关于心理模型理论,政策和计划的理论博士学位论文。

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