Figures
3.1Psychological phenomena in the spaces between the personal–collective and the private–public dimensions.
6.1Triadic formalisms accounting for action, semiosis, experience, and realities.
6.3Actuation: Semiotic development of intentional action and objects.
6.4Fractal structure of experience and behavior: Development of symbols and arguments.
6.5Substitutive semioses in the dynamics of sociocultural phenomena and personal experiences.
12.3Self-regulation with private gestures and protocanonical uses.
14.1Bounds of experiential space in an environmental event or encounter.
16.1In the elevator: regulation of sociocultural, interpersonal, and inner borders.
21.1An eternal obsessive loop. The genealogical relationship between religion and psychology.
22.3Changing configurations of distinctions and relationships.
22.11World War I propaganda posters advocating intervention.
22.13Schoolchildren rehearsal for the Empire Games in New South Wales, 1938.
23.1Map of the Iberian Peninsula around 710. Historical map adapted from García de Cortazar, Atlas de Historia de España. Barcelona: Planeta, 2005.
23.5Student drawing of the Iberian Peninsula around 710. Adapted from Lopez, Carretero & Rodriguez-Moneo (2015).
24.1Street art on the presidential palace wall in Cairo, June, 2013.
27.1The three layers of the human mind: first-, second-, and third-person perspectives.
32.1Social identities as boundary phenomena: from differences to inequalities, from inequalities to intolerance.
34.1Psyche: dynamic processes arising from a spiral of circular reaction cycles.
34.2Epistemic overlaps in the study of the developmental dynamics of psyche.
34.3Argument: a semiotic sign compiling values arising from action and producing experiences.
34.4Fields of sense (and culture) arising from experience and influencing behavior.
34.5Crisscrossing boundaries of cultural, institutional, interpersonal, and subjective fields.