[Xmca-l] Re: "sociocultural psychology" ?

David Kellogg dkellogg60@gmail.com
Fri May 22 14:39:19 PDT 2020


But this is not the exact quote. It is only a translation. The exact quote
is this:



("...) daß es nichts gibt, nichts im Himmel oder in der Natur oder im
Geiste oder wo es sei, was nicht ebenso die Unmittelbarkeit enthält als die
Vermittlung, so daß sich diese beiden Bestimmungen als ungetrennt und
untrennbar und jener Gegensatz sich als ein Nichtiges zeigt." (There is
nothing given, neither in heaven nor in nature nor in mind nor in wherever
it may be, which is not equally the unmediated contain alongside the
mediated, so that both of these two determinations (i.e. determining
something as unmediated or as mediated--DK) prove to be inseparable and
inextricable, and their contrast (or their opposition--DK) proves nul."


What's the difference between the exact quote and the translation? As I
pointed out to Andy, the translation puts "equally" and "both" in the same
clause, while the original German has them in two different clauses.
Compare:

a) Chiaroscuro paintings are both dark and light, and this was equally true
for Caravaggio as for us.

b) Chiaroscuro paintings are equally both dark and light in Caravaggio's
time and in our own.

Statement a) is true enough, although as Mike points out it is the
beginning of a concrete genetic analysis and not the end. But statement b)
is utterly false: it puts an end to all genetic analysis and abolishes
development altogether. It says, uselessly, that all paintings are 100%
dark and 100% light and so the only genetic analysis possible is one of
changing self-consciousness, either in the painter or the viewer. This is
an idealist dialectic, and it is certainly not a historical one.

Similarly, it is one thing to say that all psychological functions are both
mediated and unmediated, and this is equally true for lower functions as it
is for higher functions. For example, when I look at a painting by
Caravaggio or a film by Derek Jarman, the rod cells in my retina and my
optic nerve are mediating the experience as well as my cerebral cortex and
my biographical knowledge of Caravaggio.

But it's very different to say that all psychological functions are equally
both mediated and unmediated, or  100% mediated and 100% unmediated. In
addition to the arithmetical absurdinty, this does not allow me to
distinguish between lower and higher psychological functions.

(And I do think this is how Andy gets his notion that when two things are
different we cannot say that one is more developed than the other. Yet
higher psychological functions do indeed presuppose lower functions but not
the other way around. Andy calls this difference and not development; I
call it equally both difference and development.)

David Kellogg
Sangmyung University

New Article: Ruqaiya Hasan, in memoriam: A manual and a manifesto.
Outlines, Spring 2020
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://tidsskrift.dk/outlines/article/view/116238/167607__;!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kemhahe23g$ 

New Translation with Nikolai Veresov: *L.S. Vygotsky's Pedological
Works* *Volume
One: Foundations of Pedology*"
 https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9789811505270__;!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kelgaaoaZw$ 



On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 2:13 PM Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:

> And it is worth noting that Hegel wrote this in the 1810s simply on the
> basis of logical criticism of Kant and Jacobi (a contemporary sharing some
> views with Descartes). And yet it took more than a century (if I'm not
> mistaken) to make its way into hard science. Here's how he explains it:
>
> § 66
> That said, we continue to stand by the position that immediate knowing is
> to be taken as a fact. With this, however, the consideration is directed
> towards the field of experience, to a psychological phenomenon. – In this
> respect, it should be noted that it is one of the most common experiences
> that truths (which one knows very well to be the result of the most
> intricate and highly mediated considerations) present themselves
> immediately in the consciousness of someone conversant with such knowledge.
> Like everybody else who has been trained in a science, the mathematician
> immediately has at his fingertips solutions to which a very complicated
> analysis has led. Every educated person has immediately present in his or
> her knowing a host of universal viewpoints and principles that have
> resulted only from repeated reflection and long life experience. The
> facility we have achieved in any sphere of knowing, also in fine art, in
> technical dexterity, consists precisely in having those sorts of
> familiarity, those kinds of activity immediately present in one’s
> consciousness in the case at hand, indeed, even in an activity directed
> outwards and in one’s limbs. – In all these cases the immediacy of knowing
> does not only not exclude its mediation; to the contrary, they are so
> connected that immediate knowing is even the product and result of knowing
> that has been mediated.
>
> Andy
> ------------------------------
> *Andy Blunden*
> Hegel for Social Movements
> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://brill.com/view/title/54574__;!!Mih3wA!V1lohvu0fySbbUkCcYcJRCbGDu-27I-V6eExTcBvLglpwRB4sUpmOZ-FCZ_JuZI9AVk-hA$>
> Home Page
> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm__;!!Mih3wA!V1lohvu0fySbbUkCcYcJRCbGDu-27I-V6eExTcBvLglpwRB4sUpmOZ-FCZ_JuZLU_NXvXg$>
> On 22/05/2020 1:59 pm, mike cole wrote:
>
> Both HAVE TO BE present at once, Andy or there is no perception.
> Mike
>
> On Thu, May 21, 2020 at 8:55 PM Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:
>
>> Yes, last week in our Hegel Reading Group we read the section in the
>> Shorter Logic, following his critiques of Kant and Descartes, Hegel
>> explains how thought is both immediate *and* mediated, and even over
>> Zoom I could see the clouds gradually receding from my young students'
>> eyes. All of a sudden the whole fruitless argument between scepticism and
>> dogmatism, relativism and historicism, fell away. The most difficult thing
>> to grasp was how perception was not just immediate and mediated, but both
>> were essentially present in the same moment, how without the cultural
>> training of the senses the brain could not make any sense at all of the
>> nervous stimulation of the organs of sight, etc.
>>
>> Andy
>>
>> PS. the exact quote from Hegel is: "there is nothing, nothing in heaven,
>> or in nature or in mind or anywhere else which does not equally contain
>> both immediacy and mediation"
>> https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/works/hl/hlbegin.htm*0092__;Iw!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kekH-eIaBA$ 
>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/works/hl/hlbegin.htm*0092__;Iw!!Mih3wA!TUMhXu_xWvwV4y6fvpgv4VHU2relV4Y4V5cWZTRpCZSmXSJxKlYezU-yXkbrDDuPh_oxBg$>
>> ------------------------------
>> *Andy Blunden*
>> Hegel for Social Movements
>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://brill.com/view/title/54574__;!!Mih3wA!TUMhXu_xWvwV4y6fvpgv4VHU2relV4Y4V5cWZTRpCZSmXSJxKlYezU-yXkbrDDuiF8_dnA$>
>> Home Page
>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm__;!!Mih3wA!TUMhXu_xWvwV4y6fvpgv4VHU2relV4Y4V5cWZTRpCZSmXSJxKlYezU-yXkbrDDty4Bji_w$>
>> On 22/05/2020 9:20 am, mike cole wrote:
>>
>> This is a point I have struggled to make for many years, Andy. I didn't
>> know I was quoting Hegel:
>>
>> Hegel:
>> 'Everything is both immediate and mediated."
>>
>> The challenge is to rise to the concrete with this abstraction or its
>> just la la la.
>>
>> mike
>>
>> On Tue, May 19, 2020 at 6:42 PM Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> wrote:
>>
>>> Of course, Annalisa, I agree that Science is a moral practice, but that
>>> is not what is at issue here.
>>>
>>>
>>> Two issues concern me with what you have said: (1) the question of "who
>>> decides?" and (2) the quantification of development as in "more evolved"
>>> bringing with it the implication of moral value attached to development.
>>>
>>>
>>> (1) The discovery of the "social construction of reality" was an
>>> achievement of the Left, the progressives, with people like the Critical
>>> Psychologists, the theorists of postmodernism and post-structural feminists
>>> in the 1970s an 80s, who exposed how taken-for-granted facts along with the
>>> truths of Science were on closer inspection ideological products of
>>> dominant social groups. Of course, how reality is *seen *is an
>>> inseparable part of how reality *is*. This insight led to a range of
>>> powerful theoretical and practical critiques of all aspects of society.
>>> Feminists offered an alternative way of interpreting reality as a powerful
>>> lever for changing that reality by undermining patriarchal structures and
>>> certainties. So far so good. But today, in 2020, it is not progressives who
>>> are asking "who decides?" and calling into question the very idea of truth
>>> and fact: it is Donald Trump and Rudi Giuliani. Quite honestly, this
>>> outcome was always implicit in the postmodern and poststructuralist
>>> critique. Or, could I say: "Donald Trump is a more evolved form of Judith
>>> Butler" if I thought in those terms, which I don't.
>>>
>>>
>>> Hegel takes up this problem with the maxim: "Everything is both
>>> immediate and mediated." Yes, social interests dominant in a certain social
>>> domain by definition determine what is true in that domain (though
>>> remember, every social domain is finite and has its boundaries). But that
>>> is not just by saying something about an* independently existing*
>>> reality which can be subject to any number of *alternative*
>>> representations (as Kant would have it), but rather the dominant social
>>> interests *determine that reality itself*. They do that both *immediately
>>> *and *through the ideal representation* of that reality which is *part
>>> of that reality*. You can't "decide" by a purely discursive moves - you
>>> have to *change *that reality. You do that with the weapons of both
>>> theoretical and practical critique.
>>>
>>>
>>> What this means is that you can study the documents (assuming you
>>> weren't personally present) of some past dispute and see with your own eyes
>>> how and why some people formulated new word meanings, and began to use
>>> these new word meaning(s) in their own communication, and thereby
>>> facilitated others from using this word meaning, and the relevant concepts,
>>> in their work, and so on.
>>>
>>>
>>> (2) As perhaps I have illustrated in my example above that there is no
>>> implication of "higher" in development. In my own education, it was Sylvia
>>> Scribner's "Uses of History" (1985) which explained this to me. "Higher"
>>> implies comparison and comparison in turn implies *interchangeability*.
>>> For example, if I was considering whether to emigrate to the US or France,
>>> I might consider public safety as a metric and decide that France was
>>> superior to the US and make my decision accordingly. Or, I might consider
>>> job availability for an English-speaking monoglot like me as the metric,
>>> and decide that the US was superior to France. But to decide that the US is
>>> superior to France or vice versa without the choice and the relevant metric
>>> is the moral judgment which neither you nor I find acceptable. They're just
>>> different.
>>>
>>>
>>> Understanding word meanings and concepts entails an analysis of *both *how
>>> the word is used in the field in question, and the history as to how it
>>> came to be so. Using the concept of "germ cell," I can work my way back and
>>> forth through an etymological field, forensically, like a detective, until
>>> I can connect the particular use of the word which emerged as a germ cell
>>> at some earlier time, in some situation where the implication of choosing
>>> that word meaning was abundantly clear to all, which allows me to see
>>> *why* someone felt the need (now forgotten) to introduce the word
>>> meaning and what it's absence would mean here and now, where it is already
>>> taken for granted.
>>>
>>>
>>> My apologies for the unacceptably long message, which is much against my
>>> own mores, but I don't know how to clarify these issues more succinctly.
>>>
>>>
>>> Andy
>>>
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>> *Andy Blunden*
>>> Hegel for Social Movements
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://brill.com/view/title/54574__;!!Mih3wA!TLrWUBWNIMJR-d4Rr1HJ5aNy8a9feC14rEE8Y9KK_yg-3NYAubzMD2iHXcVRpSlw_w_wdw$>
>>> Home Page
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm__;!!Mih3wA!TLrWUBWNIMJR-d4Rr1HJ5aNy8a9feC14rEE8Y9KK_yg-3NYAubzMD2iHXcVRpSkhfCnwZw$>
>>> On 20/05/2020 3:51 am, Annalisa Aguilar wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi Andy,
>>>
>>> I suppose the issue about being on a branch of evolution has more to do
>>> with who decides what the branch is. Is it time? or is it topical? or is it
>>> based upon the interlocutors?
>>>
>>> If we say one word usage is more "evolved" than another, I suppose I am
>>> just pushing back on that because who decides what is more evolved?
>>>
>>> Forgive me, but can we ever say that if something is more "evolved" it
>>> is actually better? What do we actually mean when we say something is
>>> evolved?
>>>
>>> What if one term lasts over a longer arc of time than another usage? It
>>> seems if we use the evolution rubric, it would be considered more "fit"
>>> than the one that is changing over the same period of time.
>>>
>>> I do find it helpful that you to bring up the germ cell and how that
>>> concept pertains to analysis. That makes a lot of sense to me. I'm glad to
>>> know that to assign the parentheses does entail an ideological move, and
>>> that that can't be escaped. As long as we know what the ideology is, there
>>> is transparency in our analysis.
>>>
>>> I do think moral evaluations are worth including on all discussions, not
>>> necessarily to forbid discussions or scientific pursuits, but to use as
>>> landmarks to keep our bearings. Scientific concepts have a way of not being
>>> inclusive of contexts (i.e., lived experiences) or being grounded, right?
>>>
>>> Perhaps this is what made Vygotsky such a humane and compassionate
>>> scientific thinker is that he could understand how scientific concepts can
>>> be abusive tools for oppression. Anchoring them in lived experience shows
>>> their validity. Would this be a fair statement to you, Andy?
>>>
>>> Kind regards,
>>>
>>> Annalisa
>>> ------------------------------
>>> *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on
>>> behalf of Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> <andyb@marxists.org>
>>> *Sent:* Sunday, May 17, 2020 7:23 PM
>>> *To:* xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject:* [Xmca-l] Re: "sociocultural psychology" ?
>>>
>>>
>>> *  [EXTERNAL]*
>>>
>>> Annalisa, "where does history start"? Effectively there is no starting
>>> point, and the choosing of a starting point is always an ideological move.
>>> Foucault does this to great effect. Ilyenkov deals with this in his book
>>> "The Abstract and Concrete in Marx's Capital" and explains the need for
>>> what he calls the "logical-historical method." To short circuit the
>>> complexities of reading Ilyenkov, in CHAT we rely on the identification of
>>> the unit of analysis or "germ cell" to anchor our historical investigation.
>>>
>>>
>>> "Sociogenesis" is just Latin for "social development," the word I used.
>>> But if you are going to ascribe a moral value to "evolution" and then
>>> reject the concept on that basis, you'd better also reject "development"
>>> and all the "geneses" and evolution of species by natural selection and all
>>> modern biology while you are at it. Alternatively, you could choose
>>> *not* to ascribe moral values to scientific concepts, then the whole of
>>> science is open to you.
>>>
>>>
>>> Andy
>>> ------------------------------
>>> *Andy Blunden*
>>> Hegel for Social Movements
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://brill.com/view/title/54574__;!!Mih3wA!VTGuGy4gvXj-8N5E9YCj2IevXlVoBhK7UBQ37lx10IRWhO4lMbcXmdD-gzoCEFYW2qyYWA$>
>>> Home Page
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm__;!!Mih3wA!VTGuGy4gvXj-8N5E9YCj2IevXlVoBhK7UBQ37lx10IRWhO4lMbcXmdD-gzoCEFZ5oaoZdg$>
>>> On 18/05/2020 3:25 am, Annalisa Aguilar wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi Andy (& VO's),
>>>
>>> I think that that was my point, that we cannot capture everything in the
>>> word to describe the theory. And that is because of the limit of our
>>> language.
>>>
>>> Even where genesis actually is, where something starts can be difficult
>>> to pinpoint. I mean where does History actually start?
>>>
>>> These words that you mention phylogenesis, ethnogenesis, ontogenesis,
>>> are words that are like brackets of a pair of parentheses. Who decides
>>> where to put them? (And why not sociogenesis?)
>>>
>>> I'm not sure it's correct to say the choice of a word locates the user
>>> on a branch of a cultural evolutionary tree, because then that starts to
>>> mean that one speaker is more evolved than another based on the use of a
>>> word.
>>>
>>> It might be better to say that the choice of a word locates the user to
>>> a particular context. I could live with that.
>>>
>>> Kind regards,
>>>
>>> Annalisa
>>>
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>> *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on
>>> behalf of Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> <andyb@marxists.org>
>>> *Sent:* Saturday, May 16, 2020 9:27 PM
>>> *To:* xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject:* [Xmca-l] Re: "sociocultural psychology" ?
>>>
>>>
>>> *  [EXTERNAL]*
>>>
>>> You're never going to succeed in formally capturing the full scope of
>>> the theory in a word, Annalisa. "socioculturahistoricalinguapparatical
>>> activity theory" still leave out biology and Darwin, which is a part of our
>>> theory, too.
>>>
>>>
>>> It is sometimes said that human development is the coincidence of *four*
>>> processes: *phylogenesis *(i.e., evolution of the species), cultural
>>> development (*ethnogenesis*, the development of technology *and *language),
>>> *social development* (one and the same culture has different classes
>>> and political groups side by side) and *ontogenesis *(even twins can
>>> grow up very differently according to the experiences (*perezhivaniya*)
>>> they go through). I tried to describe this in:
>>> https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/works/ontogenesis.htm__;!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kelRJRYDAw$ 
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/works/ontogenesis.htm__;!!Mih3wA!Vn9T05o4yQ8JmcN8k0Rcq65ZDZvXCxCkPwjrS8BQz_aRy-V218xJbfgO-7EiQaXB3YgOwg$>
>>>
>>>
>>> But if you look into the history of a word what you will inevitably find
>>> is that at some point (in time and social space) there was some dispute,
>>> and this dispute was either (1) resolved by both parties agreeing and
>>> marking this agreement by the coining of a new word meaning or the dropping
>>> of a word meaning altogether, or (2) there is a split and one or both sides
>>> of the split adopt a word meaning which distinguishes them from the other
>>> side (structuralism's favourite trope) or variations on the above scenarios.
>>>
>>>
>>> So the choice of a word tends to locate the user on a branch in the
>>> cultural evolutionary tree.
>>>
>>>
>>> Andy
>>> ------------------------------
>>> *Andy Blunden*
>>> Hegel for Social Movements
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://brill.com/view/title/54574__;!!Mih3wA!Vn9T05o4yQ8JmcN8k0Rcq65ZDZvXCxCkPwjrS8BQz_aRy-V218xJbfgO-7EiQaXzee78rQ$>
>>> Home Page
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.ethicalpolitics.org/ablunden/index.htm__;!!Mih3wA!Vn9T05o4yQ8JmcN8k0Rcq65ZDZvXCxCkPwjrS8BQz_aRy-V218xJbfgO-7EiQaXY03UVbw$>
>>> On 17/05/2020 11:56 am, Annalisa Aguilar wrote:
>>>
>>> David K & VO's
>>>
>>> What pray-tell is an anthropologue?
>>>
>>> I am divided (pun intended) about saying that sociocultural = social +
>>> culture, when they are intertwined holistically. To me, sociocultural
>>> points to a space in between, or perhaps better said to a context of
>>> interactions between individuals (who form a society) that are easily
>>> accepted among them and practiced over time.
>>>
>>> We can conceptually parse out the social and the cultural, but don't we
>>> do that because of the words and not because of the ostensible reality
>>> going on interactionally? Can we always understand something by dissecting
>>> it into parts?
>>>
>>> Again, this seems to be the limit of language, not of the conceptual
>>> context or content.
>>>
>>> In a sense to use the term "sociocultural" is to grab the tail of the
>>> tiger. The tail of the tiger is still the tiger, but perhaps a more
>>> manageable one than to grab its head.
>>>
>>> Perhaps this is why Vygotskians just call themselves Vygotskians to
>>> align themselves with the source of the first theories rather than to later
>>> conceptions and other developments (i.e. Leontiev, etc). Just thinking out
>>> loud.
>>>
>>> Another argument is that if we want to be all inclusive, then we have to
>>> include tool-use, as it's not the social, the culture, and the history, but
>>> also the language and tools used. I realize some practitioners would say
>>> that language is no different than a tool, but I feel language is
>>> different, even though it may have a similar cognitive response in the mind
>>> as would using a tool.
>>>
>>> Activity suggests tool use, though not always. Consider dance, or
>>> storytelling, or going for a walk.
>>>
>>> How about: socioculturahistoricalinguapparatical activity theory???
>>>
>>> Yes! I am writing this a little tongue in cheek. I hope you do not mind.
>>>
>>> Kind regards,
>>>
>>> Annalsia
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>> *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on
>>> behalf of David Kellogg <dkellogg60@gmail.com> <dkellogg60@gmail.com>
>>> *Sent:* Saturday, May 16, 2020 6:14 PM
>>> *To:* eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject:* [Xmca-l] Re: "sociocultural psychology" ?
>>>
>>>
>>> *  [EXTERNAL]*
>>> It's a very domain-specific umbrella, like those cane-brollies that go
>>> with a bowler. "Sociocultural" is strongly preferred used in second
>>> language acquisition, thanks to the influence of Merrill Swain, Jim Lantolf
>>> and Matthew Poehner; I have never seen "cultural historical" used in this
>>> literature. But "cultural-historical" is similarly preferred in psychology
>>> and anthropology, thanks to the influence of J.V. Wertsch, Mike
>>> Cole, Martin Packer and Andy Blunden; that's really why we are having this
>>> discussion on what "socio-cultural" might mean on a list largely populated
>>> by roving psychologists and nomadic anthropologues.
>>>
>>> Interestingly, the Francophones prefer "historico-cultural", using the
>>> argument that you can understand the process without the product but not
>>> the product without the process. I stopped using "sociocultural" because I
>>> thought it was redundant, but now I am really not sure of this: it seems to
>>> me that the relationship is a similar one--you can study society as process
>>> without studying its cultural product (e.g. as demographics, economics,
>>> statistics) but you can't really study culture without some understanding
>>> of the process of its formation.
>>>
>>> There was a similar disagreement in systemic functional linguistics
>>> between Halliday and Jim Martin over the term "socio-semiotic". Martin said
>>> that it was redundant, because there couldn't be any semiotic without
>>> society. Halliday rather flippantly replied that ants had a society without
>>> a semiotics, and at the time it seemed to me that this was a non
>>> sequitur, first of all because ants don't really have a society in
>>> our sense (precisely because there is no such thing as an ant history
>>> separate from phylogenesis on the one hand and ontogenesis on the other)
>>> and secondly because ants most definitely do have a semiotics, albeit one
>>> based on chemistry and not perception as ours is.
>>>
>>> It seems to me, in retrospect, that the relationship between the
>>> semiotic and the social is much more like the relationship between the
>>> social and the biological, or even the biological and the chemical. The
>>> semiotic is a certain level of organization that the social has, but there
>>> are other levels, just as biology is a certain kind of chemical
>>> organization which does not exclude other, nonbiological ways organizing
>>> chemicals, and chemistry is a kind of physical organization which doesn't
>>> exclude sub-chemical organizations.
>>>
>>> Perhaps we can think of the relationship between culture and society in
>>> the same way?
>>>
>>> David Kellogg
>>> Sangmyung University
>>>
>>> New Article: Ruqaiya Hasan, in memoriam: A manual and a manifesto.
>>> Outlines, Spring 2020
>>> https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://tidsskrift.dk/outlines/article/view/116238/167607__;!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kemhahe23g$ 
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://tidsskrift.dk/outlines/article/view/116238/167607__;!!Mih3wA!QwnjuGWv1M4ZX6kMNV7A1nO46fLjKXBSeMFcdiKYZQb3gv2FV78Tq_DhJK9vM5IH1niRwQ$>
>>>
>>> New Translation with Nikolai Veresov: *L.S. Vygotsky's Pedological
>>> Works* * Volume One: Foundations of Pedology*"
>>>  https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9789811505270__;!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kelgaaoaZw$ 
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9789811505270__;!!Mih3wA!QwnjuGWv1M4ZX6kMNV7A1nO46fLjKXBSeMFcdiKYZQb3gv2FV78Tq_DhJK9vM5JySLOtJA$>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sun, May 17, 2020 at 8:28 AM David H Kirshner <dkirsh@lsu.edu> wrote:
>>>
>>> 4. As an umbrella term for any sociogenetic approach.
>>>
>>> Isn’t that its current usage?
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *On Behalf Of *Annalisa Aguilar
>>> *Sent:* Saturday, May 16, 2020 3:31 PM
>>> *To:* eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject:* [Xmca-l] Re: "sociocultural psychology" ?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Hi Andy, and VO's,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> What fascinates me is that the word "sociocultural" has a lot of
>>> different facets in terms of how the word was used in different contexts.
>>> It seems there are three I've been able to pick out.
>>>
>>>    1. as a derisive term in early Soviet history.
>>>    2. as an empowering term from Latin American voices.
>>>    3. as a relaxed term of the Marxist "brand" at the height of the
>>>    Cold War in the US.
>>>
>>> I'm not sure if I've done justice in the manner that I've represented
>>> that, but it is a well-intended attempt. Are there others?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> What I don't understand fully is whether there must be ONE explanation
>>> how the term came to be, or ONE definition of what it actually means. Can't
>>> it be polysemantic?  polycontextual?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> If that is what's happening, then it makes sense that there would be an
>>> ongoing controversy about which one is the right definition or reason for
>>> not using it, depending on the interlocutor.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> If we are to talk about who used the term first, and that's where the
>>> value/authority holds, then all that tells us is that for those who value
>>> who used the term first. that's where the authority is.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> If we talk about the emotional attachment of the word as it is used in
>>> context and that's where the value/authority holds, then that tells us for
>>> those who value the most personal attachment to the word, that's where the
>>> authority is.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> If we talk about how the word was used functionally, where the
>>> value/authority holds in its efficacy, then all that tells is that for
>>> those who value whether the word works or not, that's where the authority
>>> is.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I'm not sure one can put any of one these over the other two (or if
>>> there are more than that, if there are more). All we can say I suppose is
>>> whether in a particular context is the word "sociocultural" appropriate or
>>> not?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I do find that this debate has begun to have its own life, this debate
>>> over the use of a word. I've begun doubt it will ever cease.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> One day the discussion will be how one used to debate about the term,
>>> first everyone was this way about the word, than they were that way about
>>> the word, and many large camps were formed in XXXX year to say why the word
>>> should not be used, but then X years later other large camps formed to say
>>> it is fine to use the word. I suppose it will only be when the debate
>>> ceases will it come to pass that the debate will be forgotten. But will
>>> that cessation solidify the use or non-use of the word?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I understand the reasons for saying "cultural psychology." But for those
>>> swimming in a culture where behaviorism is considered the soul of
>>> psychology, adding "cultural" becomes a sad necessity.  Even then, that
>>> necessity only depends upon how one sees culture, as either as an additive,
>>> an integral ingredient of psychology, or its basis. I believe I've read on
>>> the list that one should be able to say "psychology" and just *know* that
>>> it includes culture. I don't think we are there yet.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Then that would be my argument to use "sociocultural" to understand it
>>> includes history. CHAT is sort of a defensive term (well, it is an
>>> acronym). But then... it leaves out "social" and is that OK? We certainly
>>> should not say sociocultural historical activity theory because that
>>> acronym is very unfulfilling. What is nice about CHAT though is that to
>>> chat is an activity of speech, and there is a implied meaning that also
>>> pertains to Vygotskian theories, and therefore meaningful.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In a sense, it's not the meaning that we are arguing over, but how the
>>> limitations of our particular language fails to convey a meaning with such
>>> precision that it thereby to parses away any other inappropriate meaning.
>>> I'm just not sure that the project is one that can be achieved
>>> successfully, even if it succeeds for an interim.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> At the same time I can see why story of the elephant and the blind men
>>> also have a part to play in our understandings and assumptions.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Kind regards,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Annalisa
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
>>> *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> on behalf of Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org>
>>> *Sent:* Friday, May 15, 2020 7:49 PM
>>> *To:* xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject:* [Xmca-l] Re: "sociocultural psychology" ?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *  [EXTERNAL]*
>>>
>>> Annalisa, I have only been talking and writing about Vygotsky and co.
>>> since about 2000 and have been openly Marxist since the 1960s (indeed,
>>> Vygotsky is core to how I understand Marx) and never had any reason not to
>>> be. But it is true that when Mike first went to Moscow, it was at the
>>> height of the Cold War, and when he and others first brought Vygotsky's
>>> ideas to the USA, there was a lot of resistance to their Marxist content. I
>>> think the naming issue only arose as Vygotsky and the others began to build
>>> a real following. The issues with the choice of name change over the years,
>>> as you say. I prefer" CHAT," but sometimes I use "Cultural Psychology" and
>>> sometimes I use "Activity Theory" depending on the context.
>>>
>>> Andy
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
>>> *Andy Blunden*
>>> Hegel for Social Movements
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https*3A*2F*2Furldefense.com*2Fv3*2F__https*3A*2F*2Fbrill.com*2Fview*2Ftitle*2F54574__*3B!!Mih3wA!TlyHZFzEZ7SUE8GqN8__jv7a2SAk9Q_jiqAbrNCH5Bf1I-_gLIHGg1AbVtGJm26SqOHBwA*24&data=02*7C01*7Cdkirsh*40lsu.edu*7C6f6f52b10ee64d7bfdbd08d7f9d8676f*7C2d4dad3f50ae47d983a09ae2b1f466f8*7C0*7C0*7C637252580239268522&sdata=s6REk*2BjVd*2Btd*2BH4FD*2FsS8hm1G6*2B*2FmMW*2FXfk4Vok6eNM*3D&reserved=0__;JSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSU!!Mih3wA!R9drsiySNEmllp604wKW_RghL8N-6pKyp0upwIQ08rRyyX4_xUCbMKYtkRxP4LhYAqXW_A$>
>>> Home Page
>>> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https*3A*2F*2Furldefense.com*2Fv3*2F__https*3A*2F*2Fwww.ethicalpolitics.org*2Fablunden*2Findex.htm__*3B!!Mih3wA!TlyHZFzEZ7SUE8GqN8__jv7a2SAk9Q_jiqAbrNCH5Bf1I-_gLIHGg1AbVtGJm26T9d8i0w*24&data=02*7C01*7Cdkirsh*40lsu.edu*7C6f6f52b10ee64d7bfdbd08d7f9d8676f*7C2d4dad3f50ae47d983a09ae2b1f466f8*7C0*7C0*7C637252580239268522&sdata=VSo7NWNg3ZIpG7YMMUA6Ch*2BLEaFsqH*2FT1*2FuHN0t7Zlc*3D&reserved=0__;JSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUl!!Mih3wA!R9drsiySNEmllp604wKW_RghL8N-6pKyp0upwIQ08rRyyX4_xUCbMKYtkRxP4LiAFa1TEg$>
>>>
>>> On 16/05/2020 4:18 am, Annalisa Aguilar wrote:
>>>
>>> Andy, et al,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I sort of came to this a little late in the thread, but I can offer that
>>> Vera John-Steiner didn't mind "sociocultural" to describe Vygotskian
>>> theory, but as I learn more about the word (thank you Mike), I can see how
>>> once a word is utilized with intent of derision, it's hard for the
>>> association to be broken.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I think it's that way with words all the time coming and going out of
>>> favor, or meanings shifting, like the game of telephone, but across
>>> generations and cultures.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Might I contribute to the discussion by asking whether the use of
>>> "sociocultural" was also a means of making the theories more available in
>>> the West (at least in the US). It seems there was redscare (you are welcome
>>> read the double entendre: "red scare" or "reds care", as you like)
>>> prevalent, and wouldn't it be useful to remove the Marxist "brand" to
>>> access the actual theories on child development? In other words, to
>>> depoliticize the science?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I had been a proponent of the use of the word, but as time passes, I can
>>> see its problems.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> For me, I had preferred the word because historical was always a given
>>> for me. In concern of the here and now, the real difficulty I had thought
>>> was understanding the social- how interactions between the child and the
>>> caretaker/teacher/knowledgeable peer and the -cultural, how the culture
>>> impacts thought, those things are more of the micro level, but also
>>> sociocultural, how the two also can interact and influence one another and
>>> that combined bears its own signature on the mind and its development.  As
>>> far as History (capital H) that is sort of difficult to measure when we are
>>> talking about child development as there is very little history that a
>>> child has, unless we are talking about genetics, I suppose.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Now? I'm fairly agnostic about the term. I respect and am enriched by
>>> the discourse in which we now we find ourselves immersed about it so thanks
>>> to all for this.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Kind regards,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Annalisa
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>>
>>> *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on
>>> behalf of Andy Blunden <andyb@marxists.org> <andyb@marxists.org>
>>> *Sent:* Thursday, May 14, 2020 7:24 PM
>>> *To:* xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu
>>>
>>> --
>
> "How does newness come into the world?  How is it born?  Of what fusions,
> translations, conjoinings is it made?" Salman Rushdie
> ---------------------------------------------------
> Cultural Praxis Website: https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://culturalpraxis.net__;!!Mih3wA!UhX3qSLCbdS5rxC7Q9WFIHPghpcB2oEb5UNjVMhBS8xyhYxH_Pn8J--D4dz7kelASPsBDg$ 
> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://culturalpraxis.net__;!!Mih3wA!WkcWw-Z3AI5QbHQG3kQk977PWXXDiVwBdpwxA8ArenUhjysOeMjqpavdBME_3DBDTrLXgg$>
> Re-generating CHAT Website: re-generatingchat.com
> <https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://re-generatingchat.com__;!!Mih3wA!WkcWw-Z3AI5QbHQG3kQk977PWXXDiVwBdpwxA8ArenUhjysOeMjqpavdBME_3DBsgnimuA$>
> Archival resources website: lchc.ucsd.edu.
> Narrative history of LCHC:  lchcautobio.ucsd.edu.
>
>
>
>
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