Activity theories and the ontology of psychology: Learning from Danish and Russian Experiences

Jens Skaun Mammen, Irina Mironenko

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37 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Psychology has permanent problems of theoretical coherence and practical,
analytic and critical efficiency. It is claimed that Activity Theory (AT) with roots in a long European philosophical tradition and continued in Russian AT is a first step to remedy this. A Danish version of AT may have a key to exceed some, mostly implicit, ontological restrictions in traditional AT and free it from an embracement of functionalism and mechanicism, rooted in Renaissance Physics. The analysis goes back to Aristotle’s understanding of the freely moving animal in its ecology and introduces some dualities in the encounter between subject and object which replace the dualistic dichotomies traditionally splitting psychology in Naturwissenschaft vs. Geisteswissenshaft. This also implies a "Copernican turn" of Cartesian dualism. The perspectives are to give place for a phenomenology of meaning without cutting human psyche out of Nature and to open Psychology to its domain.
Translated title of the contributionVirksomhedsteorier og psykologiens ontologi: Belært af danske og russiske erfaringer
Original languageEnglish
JournalIntegrative Psychological & Behavioral Science
Volume49
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)681-713
Number of pages33
ISSN1932-4502
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Nov 2015

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