ABSTRACT

Representing Development presents the different social representations that have formed the idea of development in Western thinking over the past three centuries. Offering an acute perspective on the current state of developmental science and providing constructive insights into future pathways, the book draws together twelve contributors with a variety of multidisciplinary and international perspectives to focus upon development in fields including biology, psychology and sociology.

Chapters and commentaries in this volume present a variety of perspectives surrounding social representation and development, addressing their contemporary enactments and reflecting on future theoretical and empirical directions. The first section of the book provides an historical account of early representations of development that, having come from life science, has shaped the way in which developmental science has approached development. Section two focuses upon the contemporary issues of developmental psychology, neuroscience and developmental science at large. The final section offers a series of commentaries pointing to the questions opened by the previous chapters, looking to outline the future lines of developmental thinking.

This book will be of particular interest to child psychologists, educational psychologists and sociologists or historians of science, as well as academics and students interested in developmental and life sciences.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Going backwards to move forwards – understanding the shortcomings of developmental science

part |60 pages

Emerging representations of development

chapter |17 pages

Goethe and Werner

From morphology to orthogenetic principle

chapter |21 pages

Making sense of self-completing wholes

Epistemological travels of Hans Driesch

part |66 pages

Study of development in its move to the twenty-first century

chapter |21 pages

The passion of Bob Cairns

Creating developmental science

chapter |15 pages

The loss of Piaget as a symptom

The issue of development in contemporary cognitive psychology

chapter |14 pages

Neuroscience

Can it become developmental?

chapter |14 pages

Socio-developmental aspects of apprenticeship

The case of musical tuition

part |63 pages

Representing what is yet to happen

chapter |10 pages

Commentary on Chapter 1: On the “Ganzheit” and stratification of the mind

The emergence of Heinz Werner's developmental theory

chapter |7 pages

Commentary on Chapter 2: Reconsidering equipotentiality

Agency and the directions of development

chapter |13 pages

Commentary on Chapter 5: Knowledge in mind

Piaget's epistemology

chapter |8 pages

Commentary on Chapter 6: Time is of the essence

From the estimation of single points to the description of functions

chapter |7 pages

Commentary on Chapter 7: Reprise in musical tuition

Hints on the helical nature of development

chapter |4 pages

General Conclusion: Representing Development

The social construction of models of change