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Re: [xmca] Article on LSV's Crisis



The whole bundle appears to be available here:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/aip/13698486

mike

On Sun, Apr 1, 2012 at 5:33 PM, Martin Packer <packer@duq.edu> wrote:

> What are the titles, Joao?
>
> Martin
>
> On Apr 1, 2012, at 7:13 PM, jbmartin@sercomtel.com.br wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > The number of the journal in which this article was published. brings
> several articles about the
> > crisis brings the psychology.
> >
> > Joao Martins
> >
> >>
> >> Sorry, I couldn't
> > access to it. Would it be possible for you to send me the
> >> article in pdf?
> >>
> > Thanks in advance.
> >> Carmen
> >>
> >> -----Mensaje original-----
> >>
> >
> > De: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] En
> >> nombre de
> > Martin Packer
> >> Enviado el: domingo, 01 de abril de 2012 20:11
> >> Para: eXtended
> > Mind, Culture, Activity
> >> Asunto: [xmca] Article on LSV's Crisis
> >>
> >>
> > This article may be interest. It is still in press, but available from
> the
> >> journal web
> > site.
> >>
> >> Martin
> >>
> >>
> >> Hyman, L. (2011). Vygotsky's
> > Crisis: Argument, context, relevance. Studies
> >> in History and Philosophy of Biological
> > and Biomedical Sciences.
> >> doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2011.11.007
> >>
> >>
> > Vygotsky's The Historical Significance of the Crisis in Psychology
> >> (1926/1927) is an
> > important text in the history and philosophy of psychology
> >> that has only become
> > available to scholars in 1982 in Russian, and in 1997
> >> in English. The goal of this
> > paper is to introduce Vygotsky's conception of
> >> psychology to a wider audience. I argue
> > that Vygotsky's argument about the
> >> 'crisis'� in psychology and its resolution can be
> > fully understood only in
> >> the context of his social and political thinking. Vygotsky
> > shared the
> >> enthusiasm, widespread among Russian leftist intelligentsia in the
> 1920s,
> >
> >> that Soviet society had launched an unprecedented social experiment: The
> >>
> > socialist revolution opened the way for establishing social conditions
> that
> >> would let
> > the individual flourish. For Vygotsky, this meant that 'a new
> >> man'� of the future would
> > become 'the first and only species in biology that
> >> would create itself.'� He envisioned
> > psychology as a science that would
> >> serve this humanist teleology. I propose that The
> > Crisis is relevant today
> >> insofar as it helps us define a fundamental problem: How can
> > we
> >> systematically account for the development of knowledge in psychology? I
> >>
> > evaluate how Vygotsky addresses this problem as a historian of the
> crisis.
> >>
> >>
> >
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