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Biologising of Childhood: Developmental Psychology and the Darwinian Myth [Pehme köide]

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Originally published in 1990, this book looks at the history of developmental psychology in order to locate and evaluate the role played by biology in its most influential formulations.

First Charles Darwin’s own writings on child development are examined. It is shown that Darwin endorsed such ideas as the ‘recapitulation’ of evolutionary ancestry in the developing child, even though this is inconsistent with his natural selection theory. The first great developmentalists – Hall, Baldwin, Freud – adopted and applied these non-Darwinian evolutionist ideas. The next generation – Vygotsky, Piaget, Werner – applied similar ideas in a variety of ways.

Alongside this evolutionism, but interconnected with it, sensationist/empiricist forms of epistemology were directing developmentalists (from Rousseau onwards) to see the child as having to work himself out of sense-bound experience – to develop further and further from the ‘here-and-now’.

Contemporary developmental theory retains these influences: biological approaches (ethological, psychobiological) remain pre-Darwinian in spirit; lifespan theories remain attached to biology; formal/cognitive approaches remain attached to sensationism. ‘Social context’ approaches are rather half-hearted, and it is only the social-constructionist orientation which seems to offer a real alternative to biology. Major conclusions are stated in chapter ten, which includes a re-evaluation of Darwin’s role.

Foreword xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
1 Introduction
1(10)
Introduction
1(8)
Notes to
Chapter One
9(2)
2 Charles Darwin and the Origins of Developmental Psychology
11(20)
The "Natural History of Babies": Darwin on Child Development
11(5)
Evolution and Recapitulation
16(3)
Darwin's Immediate Impact
19(4)
The Influence of Evolutionism
23(3)
Notes to
Chapter Two
26(5)
3 Biology and the Developmentalists: Hall, Baldwin, and Freud
31(20)
Introduction
31(1)
Granville Stanley Hall: Zealot of Evolution
32(5)
James Mark Baldwin and the "Embryology of Society"
37(6)
Sigmund Freud and the Ancestral Imperative
43(5)
Notes to
Chapter Three
48(3)
4 Biology and the Developmentalists: Vygotsky, Piaget, and Werner
51(22)
Introduction
51(1)
Minor Developmentalists in Europe and America
51(6)
Lev Vygotsky and the Ontogeny of Culture
57(2)
Jean Piaget and the Biology of Knowledge
59(8)
Heinz Werner and the Morphology of Thought
67(3)
Notes to
Chapter Four
70(3)
5 "The Prisoner of the Senses": Sensationism in Developmental Thinking
73(10)
"Prisoner of the Senses"
73(8)
Notes to
Chapter Five
81(2)
6 Infancy
83(32)
Introduction
83(1)
The Newborn
84(7)
Knowledge of the World
91(10)
Knowledge of People and Knowledge of the Self
101(6)
The Psychoanalytic Tradition
107(5)
Notes to
Chapter Six
112(3)
7 Childhood
115(36)
Introduction
115(1)
From Autism to Egocentrism
116(3)
The Origins and Functions of Language
119(5)
Reasoning and Logic
124(8)
Drawing and Spatial Representation
132(8)
Children, Peers, and the Adult World
140(7)
Notes to
Chapter Seven
147(4)
8 Adolescence
151(22)
Introduction
151(1)
Adolescence and the Acme of Intellect
152(7)
Adolescence and Turmoil
159(5)
The Adolescent in Culture
164(6)
Notes to
Chapter Eight
170(3)
9 Models and Processes
173(24)
Introduction
173(2)
Progress and Directionality
175(6)
Processes of Change and Processes of Stability
181(5)
Differentiation and Integration
186(7)
Notes to
Chapter Nine
193(4)
10 Biology and Alternatives to Biology in Contemporary Developmental Psychology
197(30)
Introduction
197(2)
Biological Theories: Ethology and Psychobiology
199(5)
Alternatives: Lifespan Theories
204(3)
Alternatives: Formal Theories
207(4)
Alternatives: Theories of Social Context
211(3)
Alternatives: Theories of Social Construction
214(5)
Notes to
Chapter Ten
219(8)
11 Conclusions
227(10)
Introduction
227(1)
The Foundations of Developmental Psychology
228(2)
The Darwinian Myth in Developmental Psychology
230(2)
The Future
232(2)
Notes to
Chapter Eleven
234(3)
References 237(14)
Reference Notes 251(2)
Author Index 253(6)
Subject Index 259