A Guided Science: History of Psychology in the Mirror of Its Making

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Transaction Publishers, 2012 - 332 páginas

Major changes have occurred in contemporary sciences—collective authorship, fragmentation of knowledge into small, quickly published (and equally quickly retractable) journal articles, and the counting of numbers of such articles by institutions as if that is a measure of “scientific productivity.” Scientists are inherently ambivalent about the benefit of these changes for the actual development of knowledge. There is a gradual “take-over” of the domain of scientific knowledge creation by other social institutions with vested interests in defending and promoting knowledge that serves their social interests. Sciences are entering into a new form of social servitude.

That sciences are guided by explicit and implicit ties to their surrounding social world is not new. In this volume Jaan Valsiner fills in the wide background of scholarship on the history of science, the recent focus on social studies of sciences, and the cultural and cognitive analyses of knowledge making. The theoretical scheme Valsiner carries over to the phenomena of social guidance of science comes from his thinking about processes of development in general—his theory of bounded indeterminacy—and on the relations of human beings with their culturally organized environments.

Valsiner examines reasons for the slow and nonlinear progress of ideas in psychology as a science at the border of natural and social sciences. Why is that movement inherently paradoxical and episodically productive in different countries at different times? Most responses are self-serving blinders for presenting science as a given rather than understanding it as a deeply human experience. For Valsiner, scientific knowledge is cultural in its core.

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Jaan Valsiner is professor of psychology at the Department of Psychology, Clark University. He is the founding editor of the journal Culture & Psychology, and the author of several books, including The Guided Mind, Culture and Human Development and Comparative Study of Human Cultural Development, and is editor of Thinking in Psychological Science.

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