Vygotsky's Psychology-Philosophy A Metaphor for Language Theory and Learning için kapak resmi
Vygotsky's Psychology-Philosophy A Metaphor for Language Theory and Learning
Başlık:
Vygotsky's Psychology-Philosophy A Metaphor for Language Theory and Learning
ISBN:
9781461512936
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 2001.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 2001.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XVI, 144 p. online resource.
Series:
Cognition and Language: A Series in Psycholinguistics
Contents:
1. Background Information on Vygotskian Theory and Vygotsky and Man -- Days and Ages -- 2. Overview of L S. Vygotsky's Psychological-Philosophical Theory -- Consciousness -- Lower Mental Processes and Higher Mental Processes -- Domains: Phylogeny, Ontogeny, Sociocultural History, Microgenesis -- 3. Tools-Psychological Tools-Internalization-Signs -- Tools -- Psychological and Technical Tools -- Internalization -- Signs -- History -- Thought-Word-Word Meanings-Language -- Word Meaning and Sense -- Inner Speech -- Concept Formation -- Scientific and Spontaneous Concepts -- Summary of Thought, Word Meaning, Language, and Concept Formation -- Dialectics -- Dialectics and Spinoza -- Problems Regarding Vygotsky's Understanding of Dialectics -- Aesthetics -- Criticisms of Vygotsky and Responses -- Vygotsky's Contributions -- 4. Chomskyan Linguistics and Vygotskian Semiotics -- American Linguistic Theory and Second Language Acquisition (SLA) -- Rationalism (Chomskyan Perspective) -- Innatism (Chomskyan Perspective) -- Competence (Chomskyan Perspective) -- Vygotskian Understanding of Rationalism, Innatism, Competence -- Rationalism (Vygotskian Perspective) -- Innatism (Vygotskian Perspective) -- Innatism and the Fodor Paradox -- Relativity (Representationalism and Perception) -- Fodor-Vygotsky-Whorf (Continuation of Innatist Discussion) -- Perception (Related to Innatism) -- Competence (and Mental Representations-Vygotskian Perspective) -- 5. Universal Grammar-SLA-Grammar from a Vygotskian Position -- Vygotskian Grammar (L1 and L2) -- 6. Conclusion -- References.
Abstract:
You hold in your hands a new book. Professor Dorothy Robbins dedicated it to one of the aspects of the cultural heritage of the famous psychologist L. S. Vygot­ sky. His activity (deyatelnost) was multifaceted. He had input into different fields of psychology: its methodology, psychology of art, pathopsychology, the psy­ chology of child and adolescent development, pedagogical psychology, general psychology, speech psychology, and other fields. Within his various activities he enriched not only psychology, but a variety of different sciences/academics­ pedagogics, defectology, psychiatry, literary critical theory, and linguistics. Some famous scientists feel that he left his mark in fields of various scientific areas that did not exist during his lifetime-such as psycho linguistics, semiotics, and cybernetics. Many psychologists and linguists conduct research in the spirit of his ideas that are contained within his approach of cultural-historical theory of human psy­ chological development, all created by Vygotsky as early as the 1920s and 1930s; these ideas have become popular among scientists in different countries in the last decades. The use of Vygotsky's theories, even beyond the frame of psychol­ ogy, turns out to be fruitful. I hope that this new book by Dorothy Robbins will help readers understand the deeper meaning of the scientific/academic research undertaken by my father and the scientific results that were obtained by him.
Dil:
English