Individual and cultural historical development
Publication date
2025-02-20
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Abstract
In this autobiography I describe how I became - via Teachers College (TC) -- a developmental psychologist. At the TC I was stimulated by a teacher to read and study scientific works on psychology. I was so enthusiastic about the then leading scholars of Dutch psychology that I decided to move to Groningen University to study psychology. I was particularly attracted by the philosophical and empirical-analytic work of Professor B.J. Kouwer. Coming from a phenomenological background Kouwer was convinced that a psychologist should be able to philosophically understand human subjectivity, while as a researcher he was radically empirical- analytical. During my entire career I followed this Kouwerian ambivalence: for me, the core of psychology consists of the tension between the humanities and the sciences, between alpha- and beta-sciences. I dedicated much of my career as a researcher to change Dutch (clinical) child psychology into a scientific developmental psychology. At the same time, I tried to do humanistic research: the study of the cultural-historical context of childhood and child development.
Keywords
Algol 64, Alpha- and beta-sciences, Conservation research, Historical developmental psychology, Modeling, Ordinality and cardinality, Utrecht School, Taverne, General Psychology, General Social Sciences
Citation
Koops, W 2025, Individual and cultural historical development. in Pillars of Developmental Psychology : Recollections and Reflections. Cambridge University Press, pp. 337-348. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009425766.031