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Reductionism and the Development of Knowledge (Jean Piaget Symposia Series) [Hardcover]

Terrance Brown (Editor), Leslie Smith (Editor)

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July 1, 2002 0805840699 978-0805840698 First Printing

Among the many conceits of modern thought is the idea that philosophy, tainted as it is by subjective evaluation, is a shaky guide for human affairs. People, it is argued, are better off if they base their conduct either on know-how with its pragmatic criterion of truth (i.e., possibility) or on science with its universal criterion of rational necessity.

Since Helmholtz, there has been increasing concern in the life sciences about the role of reductionism in the construction of knowledge. Is psychophysics really possible? Are biological phenomena just the deducible results of chemical phenomena? And if life can be reduced to molecular mechanisms only, where do these miraculous molecules come from, and how do they work? On a psychological level, people wonder whether psychological phenomena result simply from genetically hardwired structures in the brain or whether, even if not genetically determined, they can be identified with the biochemical processes of that organ. In sociology, identical questions arise.

If physical or chemical reduction is not practicable, should we think in terms of other forms of reduction, say, the reduction of psychological to sociological phenomena or in terms of what Piaget has called the "reduction of the lower to the higher" (e.g., teleology)? All in all, then, reductionism in both naive and sophisticated forms permeates all of human thought and may, at least in certain cases, be necessary to it. If so, what exactly are those cases?

The papers collected in this volume are all derived from the 29th Annual Symposium of the Jean Piaget Society. The intent of the volume is to examine the issue of reductionism on the theoretical level in several sciences, including biology, psychology, and sociology. A complementary intent is to examine it from the point of view of the practical effects of reductionistic doctrine on daily life.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
generative entrenchment account, correspondence reasoning, juvantibus reasoning, correspondence schema, psychogenetic development, imaged representation, developmental epistemology, relational methodology, genetic canalization, eliminative reductionism, representational error, intertheoretic reduction, environmental detections, shelled oyster, reflective abstraction, collective signs, normative phenomena, phenotypic switching, functional reasoning, normative facts, geometric truth
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Harvard University Press, University of Chicago Press, Human Development, Kegan Paul, Psychology Press, Presses Universitaires de France, Basic Books, Philosophy of Science, Jean Piaget, New Ideas, Soto Cornejo, Columbia University Press, Bärbel Inhelder, Psychological Review, Developmental Review, Open Court, Euclid's Elements, United States, Princeton University Press, San Francisco, Child Development
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