Kent McClelland
Member, Peace and Conflict Studies Committee
I’m a retired faculty member with a continuing research interest in Perceptual Control Theory (PCT) as a lens for understanding sociology. PCT provides an alternative view of human psychology that takes into account the feedback effects of our own actions on our perceptions of the world around us. Behavior, from this perspective, can be defined as the control of perception, and my recent scholarly work has focused on how social and cultural structures and processes have emerged from the collective control of perception.
Education and Degrees
Ph.D., Sociology, Harvard University, 1976
A.B., Sociology, Oberlin College, 1968
Selected Publications
"Social Structure and Control: Perceptual Control Theory and the Science of Sociology.” Chapter 9 in The Interdisciplinary Handbook of Perceptual Control Theory: Living Control Systems IV, edited by Warren Mansell. Elsevier. 2020
"Resolving Interpersonal and Intrapersonal Conflicts: A Comparison of the Practice of Mediation with Method-of-Levels Psychotherapy.” Journal of Integrated Social Sciences 9 (2019) pp. 1-38.
“Cycles of Conflict: A Computational Modeling Alternative to Collins’s Theory of Conflict Escalation.” Sociological Theory 32 (2014) pp. 100-127. DOI: 10.1177/0735275114536387
Purpose, Meaning, and Action: Control Systems Theories in Sociology, edited by Kent A. McClelland and Thomas J. Fararo. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 2006.
“Collective Control of Perception: Constructing Order from Conflict.” International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 60 (2004) pp. 65-99.
“Perceptual Control and Social Power.” Sociological Perspectives 37 (1994) pp. 461-496.