[xmca] Method and Methodology in USSR in the 60s

From: Carol Macdonald (macdonaldc@educ.wits.ac.za)
Date: Tue Aug 30 2005 - 21:34:09 PDT


Mike
That description was so humorous it's worth being framed!

Carol

-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu]On
Behalf Of Mike Cole
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2005 7:29 PM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] Method/Methodology

Sasha and Peter--
 The issue of who is/was a Marxist psychologist during the history of the
USSR is far too
complex for me. The forms of subtrefuge involving the KGB, the partial
truths, the use of humor and irony
in conversation, never mind the amount of vodka consumed, make such
judgments always problematic.
 Part of what I have taken away from this exchange is that the terms method
and methology have different
histories of use in different countries, with different personal and
political ramifications. As my prior note
perhaps made clear (I always find my typing so bad I am not sure myself what
I wrote!) I think there is a
useful distinction between the terms method and methodology in contemporary
CHAT discourse. But this
generalization may have to be restricted to particular national traditions.
mike

 On 8/29/05, Peter Moxhay <moxhap@portlandschools.org> wrote:
>
> Sasha,
>
> Your remarks on V. P. Zinchenko and G. P. Schedrovitsky are truly
> fascinating as well as informative! Did Davydov really write VPZ's
> philosophy exam?!
>
> May I ask for one clarification? You talk about "methodology" as used
> in Russia from the 1960's on as "practically an euphemism for non-
> marxist philosophy." In the case of Schedovitsky, in some of his
> writings I've read, he seems to define his position as a Marxist one,
> as based on an concept of activity that derives from Marx. So, in
> your opinion, was Schedrovitsky's point of view (in distinction from
> VPZ's) a Marxist one or not?
>
> Peter
>
>
> >
> > Hi all,
> > The number of posts I have to reply is threateningly growing so I
> > have do my
> > best to survive under them :-).
> >
> > First of all I have to give a clarification of my provocative tone
> > concerning this at the first sight banal term.
> > According to tradition formed from early sixties of the past
> > century in
> > Russian (Soviet) psychology, the tradition that has noting to do
> > neither
> > with Marxism as it is nor with ideas of Ilyenkov (Vasilij Davydov was
> > extremely alone among soviet psychologists with his consistent
> > Marxism and
> > Ilyenkovism) so called methodology is practically an euphemism for
> > non-marxist philosophy.
> > Realizing that serious theoretic analysis is impossible without a
> > philosophic reflection and having no case to use openly one of non-
> > marxist
> > philosophies (I have to repeat, that genuine nonideological Marxism
> > with
> > some minor exceptions was in the Soviet Union and lately in Russia
> > practically unknown among serious investigators) they rename this
> > philosophical or logical reflection into "methodology", as if it
> > was an
> > independent from philosophy, positive, free from ideology discipline.
> > According to this attitude the curriculum of psychological
> > faculties even
> > now includes a courses of so called "methodology of psychology"
> > which has
> > nothing to do neither with classical philosophy nor with definite
> > psychological theory. It has nothing to do with any kind of specific
> > experimental methods as well. As a rule it is a florid, eclectical
> > reflection based on popular here and now ideas or philosophical
> > systems.
> > Only one quality unifies all those reflections that's its non-marxist
> > character.
> > One of the best and mostly typical examples of such "methodology"
> > proposes
> > Vladimir Petrovitch Zinchenko. (Here I have to underline, that I
> > deeply
> > appreciate Vladimir Petrovitch as an outstanding scientist and a
> > very kind
> > person, moreover I'm seriously insisting that I regard him as one
> > of my
> > principal teachers in psychology. It was Zinchenko who pushed me to
> > pay
> > attention at Nikolai Bernstein - the greatest Russian physiologist
> > with its
> > ideas of alive movement. Unfortunately our mutual understanding is
> > finishing
> > as soon as we enter a field of so called "methodology".)
> > VPZ stands openly on anti-Marxist position and in the same time
> > pretends to
> > be a vigotskianist. He claims marxist method as extremely
> > nonproductive and
> > in the same time tries to tackle the problem of germ cell. He put
> > forward a
> > brilliant Bernstein's idea of alive movement as a germ cell of
> > psyche and
> > there and then "enriches" it adding such additional "germ cells" as
> > signs,
> > symbols, speech and. God-Man. He modestly doesn't pretend to
> > formulate a new
> > psychological theory and in the same time he tries to formulate new
> > pluralistic methodology combining with ease the materialistic and
> > idealistic
> > elements. Finally he pretends to be a profound methodologist and in
> > the same
> > time boasting that he have never read Spinoza or Hegel and that his
> > university test on philosophy was written by Vasia Davydov.
> > I want to repeat, the VPZ's understanding of "methodology" is
> > typical for
> > modern Russian psychology. And the case of VPZ is not the worst.
> > I can repeat after Steve "I certainly agree that there is no such
> > thing as a
> > methodology without theory, but I also would agree with the
> > statement that
> > there is no such thing as a theory without methodology." In other
> > words
> > theory and methodology are initially connected so that bad
> > methodology is
> > equal to bad theory and vice versa. Nowadays one can rarely meet in
> > Russian
> > psychological journals an article pretending to formulate some new
> > theoretic
> > idea, or containing serious critic of basic theoretic concepts. But
> > each
> > journal have a special part concerning "methodological questions"
> > and the
> > mostly popular position in modern methodology is "methodological
> > liberalism"
> > or simply banal eclecticism and pantophagy.
> > That is why I'm usually insisting that I have nothing to do with
> > methodology, I am a psychologist.
> >
> > The other side of the issue is connected with the name of Georgi
> > Petrovitch
> > Schedrovitsky who called himself a methodologist, a methodologist
> > without
> > any additional definition. G.P. was an influential figure in
> > seventies and
> > left after himself many followers.
> > But, again I have to add a drop of poison into my appreciation. All
> > his
> > followers in striking contrast to their dainty methodological
> > reflection
> > give us very modest theoretic results, the results interesting and
> > understandable as a rule only for their narrow close circle.
> > And this result is natural. If we as investigators are trying to
> > work with
> > subject matter or PREDMET which is created by a methodologist we
> > are dealing
> > with those narrow content which was put in it by a methodologist
> > whereas
> > the empirical object of our theorizing stays misunderstood. The
> > point is
> > that according to marxist logic the process of constituting of
> > PREDMET of
> > any science is the objective historical process funded in historically
> > developing material practice instead of pure intellectual product
> > of one
> > genial scientist or methodologist.
> > The best critical analysis of this issue contains in brilliant book
> > of EVI's
> > friend, co-author and disciple as well as a member of our newborn
> > ISCAR's
> > "Dialectical psychology" section Lev Naumenko <Monism as a
> > principal of
> > dialectical logic>. Those of XMCA members who know Russian can
> > find this
> > book on my website http://www.voxnet.ru/~monada/archive.php?
> > lng=ru . The
> > subject is discussed in the second part of the book in paragraph 2.
> > Printsip
> > gomogennosti. Ob'ekt nauki i ee predmet.
> > Many years ago at the time of the first conference on Vygotsky's
> > theory at
> > the Moscow Institute of Psychology in 1981 I weighed in on the
> > debate with
> > G.P. on the round table concerning the methodological problems. (A
> > funny
> > detail was that this time being an evening department psychological
> > faculty
> > student I was working in Davydov's Institute as cloakroom
> > attendant. So the
> > discussion started in academic circumstances in "Malaya" auditorium
> > continued and finished in cloakroom.) I've asked G.P. about the
> > role of
> > methodologist in real scientific process. I insist that so called
> > methodology, or methodological reflection is an inseparable part of
> > any real
> > cognition process and all big theorists had to be in the same time big
> > methodologists, that division of labor between scientists and
> > methodologists
> > is something equivocal, that scientist that alienates his rights on
> > methodological reflection to anybody looks like a husband who
> > alienates his
> > wife or daughter to the first who comes along.
> > The G.P's answer was literally the following: Marx, Vygotsky,
> > Einstein were
> > high-brow highbrow and they really can realize not only scientific
> > investigation but a methodological reflection as well. But the actual
> > scientists are far from high philosophical culture (and often from any
> > culture) so they are need of him as a Methodologist. ( I suspect
> > that the
> > utmost openness of the answer was provoked by the circumstances of
> > cloakroom
> > :-) ).
> > Mike wrote:
> >
> >>> Once stabilized (if stabilized?) we arrive at what Schedrovitsky
> >>> refers
> >>>
> > to as scientific activity. My
> >
> >>> main reservation is that I am unsure that there is ever a really
> >>> stable
> >>>
> > relationship where the
> >
> >>> methodology is conventionalized.
> >>>
> >
> > I can subscribe to Mike's reservation an add that stabilization of
> > methodology simply means the death of science because substantial
> > movement
> > can't be realized without permanent specification and development
> > of its
> > methods.
> >
> > Peter wrote:
> >
> >>>> I'd be interested to know what you think about this usage of the
> >>>> term
> >>>>
> > "methodology." If this sense
> >
> >>>> of the term is acceptable, can we not say that Aristotle, Galileo,
> >>>>
> > Descartes, Newton, Marx were all
> >
> >>>> doing "methodological work"?
> >>>>
> >
> > I think that I completely formulate my attitude to G.P.'s
> > terminology. I
> > think that any serious thinker is in the same time a theorist and
> > methodologist. Aristotle, Galileo, Descartes, Newton, Marx can't
> > be the
> > exception.
> >
> > Victor's dissertation on Spinoza is very interesting for me
> > especially the
> > footnote. It can be interesting to organize some time a special
> > discussion
> > concerning Spinoza and EVI, Spinoza and LSV. By the way I am going
> > to put on
> > my website the materials (meanwhile in Russian) of current and very
> > bitter
> > dispute concerning the EVI's interpretation of Spinoza. The dispute is
> > taking place among the EVI's followers.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Sasha
> >
> >
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-
> >> bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] On
> >> Behalf Of Mike Cole
> >> Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2005 7:47 PM
> >> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >> Subject: Re: [xmca] Method/Methodology
> >>
> >> Peter, Sasha, Steve et al--
> >> Since I am stuck at a car dealer waiting for brakes to be
> >> replaced and
> >> they
> >> have
> >> a wireless hotspot, I have a moment to write on this topic which I
> >> have
> >> learned
> >> a lot about in reading various comments.
> >> My own eclectic educational path has led me to distinguish
> >> between the
> >> terms
> >> method and methodology which appear to be used interchangeably by
> >> many
> >> in the chat literature I read and some in this discussion.
> >> It may be that Schedrovitsky's point is compatible with what I
> >> have been
> >> thinking.
> >> In my work I habitually use several ways of gathering evidence.
> >> Observations, test
> >> scores, products of people's activity, newspaper stories, budgets of
> >> organizations.
> >> Each of these "sources of evidence" I consider a method. The
> >> ensemble of
> >> these
> >> mehods and the ways in which I combine them (as systematically as
> >> I can
> >> manage)
> >> is what I think of as a methodology. Some might refer to this
> >> usages as a
> >> synonym
> >> for "multi-method" research strategies. The difference, I think,
> >> is the
> >> extent to which
> >> there is systematicity in how the variety of methods is chosen and
> >> the
> >> logic
> >> that
> >> connects them to each other (on the one hand) and on the theory and
> >> predmet
> >> on the other.
> >> Once stabilized (if stabilized?) we arrive at what Schedrovitsky
> >> refers
> >> to
> >> as scientific
> >> activity. My main reservation is that I am unsure that there is
> >> ever a
> >> really stable relationship
> >> where the methodology is conventionalized. But maybe that is simply
> >> because
> >> I work in
> >> such a foggy arena of human inquiry.
> >> mike
> >>
> >> On 8/24/05, Peter Moxhay <moxhap@portlandschools.org> wrote:
> >>
> >>>
> >>> Sasha, Steve, and all:
> >>>
> >>> It is interesting that G. P. Schedrovitsky sometimes uses the term
> >>> "methodology" or "methodological work" to refer to work that is done
> >>> in order to *bring into being* a new science or theory. That is, the
> >>> work that is done in order to constitute a new PREDMET or object of
> >>> study/ subject matter. For example, he wrote (my translation):
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>> Here you may ask: Why, in particular do I call this work
> >>>> "methodological," rather than, say, scientific? Primarily because
> >>>> scientific work properly speaking, i.e. work according to the
> >>>> canons and laws of scientific research, is possible only within the
> >>>> bounds of an already existing PREDMET (subject matter/object of
> >>>> study). For example, Galileo constructed the scientific apparatus
> >>>> of mechanics -- after which the scientist can make his entrance on
> >>>> the stage, conduct his research within the bounds of this PREDMET,
> >>>> and, in parallel, develop and transform it into other scientific
> >>>> PREDMETS. And if such a PREDMET does not yet exist, scientific
> >>>> research and development can simply not exist. And therefore in the
> >>>> "Conversations" Galileo acted not as a scientist but as a
> >>>> methodologist. And Descartes worked in precisely the same way, when
> >>>> he created analytic geometry and natural-sciences type disciplines.
> >>>> (From a collection, Myshlenie, ponimanie, refleksiya, published in
> >>>> 2005)
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> I'd be interested to know what you think about this usage of the
> >>> term
> >>> "methodology." If this sense of the term is acceptable, can we not
> >>> say that Aristotle, Galileo, Descartes, Newton, Marx were all doing
> >>> "methodological work"?
> >>>
> >>> Peter
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>> Sasha's discussion of the term "methodology" is intriguing. I
> >>>> certainly agree that there is no such thing as a methodology
> >>>> without theory, but I also would agree with the statement that
> >>>> there is no such thing as a theory without methodology. In other
> >>>> words, methodology - the use and study of method - is an essential
> >>>> property of any serious theoretical system, and all serious
> >>>> theories employ methodology. This of course applies to Marxism,
> >>>> which can be claimed to be the most methodologically advanced
> >>>> theoretical system because it consciously synthesizes all
> >>>> methodologies (formal logic, dialectical logic, observation,
> >>>> experiment, induction, deduction, analysis, synthesis, etc. etc.).
> >>>> It is very common among Marxists of many tendencies to speak of a
> >>>> "Marxist methodology," which seems to be used more or less
> >>>> synonymously with the more commonly employed term "Marxist
> >>>> method." One or the other or both of the two terms to my knowledge
> >>>> are used ubiquitously by virtually the entire rainbow of Marxist
> >>>> tendencies, dating back to the late 19th century. Googling around a
> >>>> little, I notice that the term "Marxist methodology" is sometimes
> >>>> used to mean "Marxist method," but not in a way that attempts to
> >>>> differentiate the two. The news that Ilyenkov never used the terms
> >>>> methodology (or epistemology) certainly gets my attention, and I
> >>>> will think about that as I study EVI. But until Ilyenkov or Sasha
> >>>> can persuade me otherwise - and I admit, I have been finding EVI
> >>>> quite persuasive over the last couple years since I discovered him
> >>>> through xmca - my perspective is to continue to view the term
> >>>> methodology as a property of theory, and to apply the method (or
> >>>> methodology if you prefer) of Marxism as best I can to understand,
> >>>> among other things, the ways method and methodology are used in
> >>>> human affairs.
> >>>>
> >>>> Best,
> >>>> - Steve
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> At 03:09 PM 8/21/2005 +0400, Sasha wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>> Hi all,
> >>>>>
> >>>>> IMHO the problem of meaning of so called "methodology" is a little
> >>>>> bit more
> >>>>> complicated than it can be estimated from the first sight. First
> >>>>> of all this
> >>>>> term is rather new. It was brought into fashion in the beginning
> >>>>> of the last
> >>>>> century. Neither Hegel nor Marx had ever used it. Certainly
> >>>>> Ilyenkov knew
> >>>>> this term but never used it either.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> <snip>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> _______________________________________________
> >>> xmca mailing list
> >>> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> >>> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
> >>>
> >>>
> >> _______________________________________________
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> >>
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> >
> >
> >
>
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