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Necessary Knowledge: Piagetian Perspectives on Constructivism [Pehme köide]

(Author passed away, as advised by wife waiting for documentation SF01787752)
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Originally published in 1993, this monograph addresses a central problem in Piaget’s work, which is the temporal construction of necessary knowledge. The main argument is that both normative and empirical issues are relevant to a minimally adequate account of the development of modal understanding. This central argument embodies three main claims. One claim is philosophical. Although the concepts of knowledge and necessity are problematic, there is sufficient agreement about their core elements due to the fundamental difference between truth-value and modality. Any account of human rationality has to respect this distinction. The second claim is that this normative distinction is not always respected in psychological research on the origins of knowledge where emphasis is placed on the procedures and methods used to gain good empirical evidence. An account of the initial acquisition of knowledge is not thereby an account of its legitimation in the human mind. The third claim relates to epistemology. Intellectual development is a process in which available knowledge is used in the construction of better knowledge. The monograph identifies features of a modal model of intellectual construction, whereby some form of necessary knowledge is always used. Intellectual development occurs as the reduction of modal errors through the differentiation and coordination of available forms of modal understanding. Piaget’s work continues to provide distinctive and intelligible answers to a substantive and outstanding problem.

Photograph of Jean Piaget, c. 1925 x
Preface--or Hill-climbing with Jean Piaget xi
1 Towards an Epistemology of Necessary Knowledge
1(34)
1 Introduction
1(3)
2 Piaget's Problem: The Construction of Necessary Knowledge
4(3)
3 Necessity in Philosophical Epistemology
7(14)
[ 3.1] Necessity in Traditional Epistemology
8(7)
[ 3.2] Necessity in Contemporary Epistemology
15(6)
4 Logical Norms
21(6)
[ 4.1] Different Norms
22(2)
[ 4.2] Problematic Norms
24(3)
5 Logical Intuition
27(5)
[ 5.1] Different Intuitions
27(1)
[ 5.2] Problematic Intuition
28(4)
6 Conclusion
32(3)
2 Piaget's Empirical Epistemology
35(20)
7 Piaget's Tertium Quid
35(3)
8 Knowing as a Relational Process
38(13)
[ 8.1] Construction as a Normative Process
39(2)
[ 8.2] Construction Through Action
41(3)
[ 8.3] Unconscious and Conscious Processes
44(2)
[ 8.4] Sets of Possibilities
46(1)
[ 8.5] Search for Coherence
47(3)
[ 8.6] Epistemic Subject
50(1)
9 Empirical Testability
51(4)
3 Methods
55(26)
10 Problems of Method
55(1)
11 Critical Method
56(4)
12 False Negatives
60(2)
13 Method and Necessary Knowledge
62(19)
[ 13.1] Foundationalist Account
63(4)
[ 13.2] Causal Account
67(6)
[ 13.3] Commentary
73(8)
4 Procedures
81(16)
14 Procedural Changes
81(2)
15 Experimental Studies
83(4)
16 Empirical Studies and Necessary Conservation
87(10)
5 Tasks
97(26)
17 Assessment Tasks
97(5)
18 Age and Ability
102(10)
[ 18.1] Facts and Norms
105(2)
[ 18.2] Social Class as an Alternative Antecedent Variable
107(2)
[ 18.3] Age Range as a Hedge against the Criteriality of Age
109(3)
19 Mental Models
112(11)
6 Alternatives to Constructivism
123(22)
20 Platonism Revisited
123(2)
21 Social Construction
125(10)
22 The Learning Paradox
135(10)
7 Epistemic Construction
145(38)
23 Structures and Construction
145(4)
24 Construction and Classification
149(18)
[ 24.1] Class Inclusion as a Logical Principle
151(2)
[ 24.2] Class Inclusion and Operational Logic
153(8)
[ 24.3] Class Inclusion Reasoning
161(6)
25 Constructing Necessary Knowledge
167(10)
[ 25.1] Intellectual Construction as Differentiation
168(3)
[ 25.2] A Modal Model of Differentiation
171(6)
26 Piagetian Constructivism and Consistency
177(6)
8 Conclusion--Necessary Knowledge and Piagetian Research
183(15)
27 Overview--Piagetian Perspectives on Necessary Knowledge
183(8)
28 Necessary Knowledge and Constructivist Research
191(7)
Photograph of Jean Piaget, c. 1978 198(1)
References 199(22)
Author Index 221(6)
Subject Index 227
Leslie Smith