Observation of Human Systems

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A01=Jose Magone
A01=Joshua W. Clegg
Aaro Toomela
Alex Kozulin
Author_Jose Magone
Author_Joshua W. Clegg
Behavioral Confirmation
Category=JM
Child's Intellectual Level
Children's Future Functioning
Children’s Future Functioning
Child’s Intellectual Level
Deontic Logic
developmental theory
Dynamic Assessment
ecological perception
Ecological Psychology
Empirical Psychological Research
empirical research methods
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eric P. Charles
FTS Model
Genetic Logic
Hasse Diagram
Holistic Approach
holistic psychology
holistic social science research
Human Science Methods
Jaan Valsiner
Jeffrey S. Reber
Joshua W. Clegg
Lee Rudolph
Lewinian Field Theory
Life Space
Mental Development
Mind Brain Reduction
participatory methodology
Person Environment System
Real Number System
RenAn Der Veer
Root Beer Float
sociocultural theory
Sociogenetic Law
Specific Cell Phone
Standard IQ Test
Topological Psychology
Vice Versa
Work Family Conflict
Zachary B. Beckstead

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138516526
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Nov 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Contemporary mainstream psychology has moved toward methodological specificity bounded by instrumental experimentalism. However, this institutional reduction of sanctioned methods has not been fully embraced by all social scientists, nor even by all experimental psychologists. The social sciences are rife with examples of practicing empirical scientists disaffected with the reductionism and atomism of traditional experimentalism.

The empirical theory and practice of four of these disaffected social scientists--Lev Vygotsky, James Baldwin, James Gibson, and Kurt Lewin--is explored in this volume. Each of the scientists considered here argued for a rigorously empirical method while still maintaining a clear anti-reductionist stance. They justified their disaffection with the dominant psychological paradigms of their respective eras in terms of a fidelity to their phenomena of study, a fidelity they believed would be compromised by radical reductionism and ontological atomism.

The authors in this collection explore the theory and practice of these eminent researchers and from it find inspiration for contemporary social science. The primary argument running through these analyses is that the social sciences should take seriously the notion of holistic empirical investigation. This means, among other things, re-establishing the indissoluble ties between theory, method and procedure and resisting the manualization of research procedures. It also means developing theories of relations and not simply of elemental properties. Such theories would concern particular units, fields, or systems of relations and not be reduced to, or interpreted in the terms of, other systems. Finally, a holistic social science requires integration of the active agent into theory, method, and procedure, an integration that points toward both participatory and emancipatory methods.

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