@article{oai:nara-edu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00012484, author = {小笠原, 真}, issue = {1}, journal = {奈良教育大学紀要. 人文・社会科学}, month = {Nov}, note = {This study examines four works by George H. Mead (1863-1931), an American sociologist, social psychologist, and philosopher; The Philosophy of the Present (1932) , Mind, Self, and Society: from the Standpoint of a Social Behaviorist (1934) , Movement of Thought in the Nineteenth Century (1936) , and The Philosophy of the Act (1938). Its purpose is to understand his viewpoint of "social behaviorism" and his "self" theory. In this study, I shall first point out that Mead adopted "social behaviorism" as a methodology, and that its basic material was acts. Then, I shall try to show that as far as his analysis of the internal structure of act is concerned he presented his "social behaviorism" as a communication theory as well as a perspective theory. Concerning Mead's "self" theory, I shall consider the fact that he definitely sided with the social theory of the self, which emphasizes that society is the locus in which the self develops through interactions with others. I shall also explore the meanings of his "I" concept and "me" concept, as one of the characteristics of Mead's "self" theory is to divide the self into "I" and "me". I shall further raise a few questions about his "self" theory, pointing out some difficultis with it.}, pages = {1--19}, title = {George H. Mead 研究 -特に彼の「社会的行動主義」の視座と「自我」論を中心に-}, volume = {39}, year = {1990} }