Social Interaction and the Development of Knowledge

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Adolescent Parent Conflict
Bryan W. Sokol
Category=JMA
Category=JMC
Category=JMH
children's
Children's Prosocial Behavior
Children's Social Cognitive Development
Children’s Prosocial Behavior
Corporate Ceo
Cost Perception Responses
DE
Developmental Mechanism
Domain Specific Accounts
Egocentric Speech
Epistemic Development
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eq_society-politics
Increasing Age Children
Jaan Valsiner
Jan Boom
Jeremy I. M. Carpendale
Larry Nucci
Leslie Smith
Mark H. Bickhard
Michael J. Chandler
Orlando Lourenco
Piaget's Account
Piagetian Theory
Prosocial Acts
Prosocial Behavior
Prosocial Dilemmas
Rainer Dobert
Relational Metatheory
Richard F. Kitchener
Secondary Circular Reactions
Situation Conventions
Social Cognitive Development
Social Epistemology
Sociological Holism
Subject Subject Interactions
Tamer G. Amin
Timothy P. Racine
Ulrich Muller
Universal Pragmatics
Vice Versa
Willis F. Overton

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415651783
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Feb 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Written by highly respected theorists in psychology and philosophy, the chapters in this book explicate and address fundamental epistemological issues involved in the problem of the relationship between the individual and the collective. Different theoretical viewpoints are presented on this relationship, as well as between the nature of rationality and morality, relativism and universalism, and enculturation and internalization. Many chapters also highlight similarities and differences between these alternative frameworks and Piaget's theory, and thus correct the misperception that Piaget had nothing to say about the social dimension of development. Other chapters focus on the implications of these debates for the important topic areas of pedagogy, moral development, and the development of social understanding in infancy and childhood. Although Piaget's theory is presented and evaluated by some of the chapters in this collection, the authors remain critical and do not shy away from revising or extending Piaget's theory whenever it is deemed necessary.

Though the topic covered in this book is of fundamental importance in the social sciences, it is rarely addressed in a sustained way as it is in this collection of chapters. The book benefits social scientists interested in fundamental epistemological issues, especially as these concern the relationship between the individual and the collective, with implications for the conceptualization of morality and rationality.

Jeremy I. M. Carpendale, Ulrich Müller