The Second Cognitive Revolution: A Tribute to Rom Harré

Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

Rom Harré’s career spans more than 40 years of original contributions to the development of both psychology and other human and social sciences. Recognized as a founder of modern social psychology, he developed the microsociological approach ‘ethogenics’ and facilitated the discursive turn within psychology, as well as developed the concept of positioning theory. Used within both philosophy and social scientific approaches aimed at conflict analysis, analyses of power relations, and narrative structures, the development and impact of positioning theory can be understood as part of a second cognitive revolution. Whereas the first cognitive revolution involved incorporating cognition as both thoughts and feelings as an ineliminable part of psychology and social sciences, this second revolution released this cognition from a focus on individuals, and towards a focus of understanding individuals as participating in public practices using public discourses as part of their cognition. This edited volume adds to the scholarly conversation around positioning theory, evaluates Rom Harré’s significance for the history and development of psychology, and highlights his numerous theoretical contributions and their lasting effects on the psychological and social sciences. Included among the chapters: What is it to be a human being? Rom Harré on self and identity The social philosophy of Harré as a philosophy of culture The discursive ontology of the social world Ethics in socio-cultural psychologies Discursive cognition and neural networks The Second Cognitive Revolution: A Tribute to Rom Harré is an indispensable reader for anyone interested in his cognitive-historical turn, and finds an audience with academics and researchers in the social and human science fields of cognitive psychology, social psychology, discursive psychology, philosophy, sociology, and ethnomethodology.

Chapters

On the Soul, the Death of the Soul, and the Nature of Evil

In this synoptic paper I should like to contribute to the formation and defence of a Secular conception of the Soul through elucidating the relation between the mind and the Soul, as well as the relations between Mind and body, and Soul and the flesh. Drawing on a Platonic conception of the Soul, bu... see more

Psychology and Non-sense: Schizophrenese as Example

In this chapter we will focus on the relation between psychology as a discipline and how it understands nonsense. We will present a broad Wittgensteinian perspective inspired by the approaches of Peter Winch and Rom Harré, and use Wolcott’s approach to the ‘language’ of schizophrenia, Schizophrenese... see more

Harré and Hinges—Metaphysics of Ungrounded Foundations

Wittgenstein has been an important interlocutor throughout Harré’s thinking and writing, and especially in instigating his version of the discursive turn in psychology. In recent years Harré has defended the idea of a “third Wittgenstein”, expounded by among others Daniele Moyal-Sharrock. The third ... see more

Discursive Cognition and Neural Networks

Harré’s Discursive psychology located human beings in their proper ecological niche—a setting of relationships and conversations. Within the exchanges to be found there they form themselves according to the values they espouse and help to make real in themselves and others through praxis. That view,... see more

The Social Construction of Emotions

This chapter describes how Rom Harré’s intellectual journey led him to play a role in changing how psychologists understand and study Emotion. The edited volume he published in 1986, The Social Construction of Emotions, presented a compelling alternative to the predominant 1980s psychological concep... see more

Rom Harré as a Moral Philosopher

I will here discuss the unique combination of empirical psychological research and normative moral philosophy found in the works of Rom Harré. I will argue that Positioning theory—and its approach to rights and duties in human social life—is not yet another value neutral psychological theory, but ra... see more

Psychiatry as a Hybrid Discipline

Hybrid discipline along an extraordinarily creative life, Rom Harré’s views on both the natural and Social sciences can also illuminate the problems of Psychiatry. Constructed during the early 19th century, Psychiatry was from the start a Hybrid discipline, that is, a conceptual cento made from frag... see more

Ethics in Socio-cultural Psychologies

Rom Harré’s focus on Morality, attributing humans with powers to act and accounting for their inner mental states, forms a fundamental basis for the epistemological redefinition of Social psychology as a human and cultural discipline. Harré suggests possible links between his Positioning theory and ... see more

Revisiting Greenspeak

The book Greenspeak sought to establish the foundations of a critical discourse concerned with the ways the environmental crisis has been constructed by a range of environmental discourses, both by environmentalists and non-environmentalist and anti-environmentalist speakers, as distinct from an env... see more

A Constructionist Conversation with Positioning Theory

Positioning theory might characterize the conception of “social science” as in a continuous state of evolution. Possibly resulting from the pervasive spirit of revolution in the 1960s, the speed of evolution was markedly intensified. Although a seasoned experimental social psychologist, I began as w... see more

The Discursive Ontology of the Social World

Rom Harré’s seminal work in the Social sciences is both of an epistemological and an ontological nature. At the epistemological level, Harré has advocated a new theoretical and research approach to Social psychology for which he coined in the seventies the neologism ‘Ethogenics’ . In Ethogenics a ne... see more

The Social Philosophy of Harré as a Philosophy of Culture

The chapter reconstructs main features of Harré’s social philosophy in order to present this as a philosophy of culture. This reconstruction involves features of Harré’s natural philosophy. It shows how key notions in Harré’s work, such as the sense of Self and grammar, relate to a cultural understa... see more

Governmental Power and Positioning of Marginalized People

This chapter extends Rom Harré’s Positioning theory to a critical topic in Conflict analysis, that is, the ways in which governments exert disciplinary controls over the governed. In particular, I examine a menacing kind of Governmental power to manipulate vulnerable population groups by distorting ... see more

What Is It to Be a Human Being? Rom Harré on Self and Identity

Rom Harré has held different views at different times on Self and Identity. He liked to keep these terms open and flexible, in line with his opinion that, “for the most part, selves are fictions”. These fictions take form in the ongoing flow of activities that People produce in interaction with one ... see more

Rom Harré on Personal Agency

In this brief tribute, I interpret Rom Harré’s theory of personal Agency, as articulated in Personal Being and selected subsequent works, before considering some ways in which Harré’s accounts of personal Agency and Social positioning might be developed further to interpret and explain the acquisiti... see more

Rom Harré, Positioning Theory and the Social Sciences: A Personal and Sympathetic Portrait

Starting with his own personal experiences as Rom Harré’s PhD student in the late 1980s, Patrick Baert presents Harré as a remarkably versatile and broad intellectual, who has been able to work and contribute significantly in a variety of fields. This chapter shows how Rom Harré’s breadth has enable... see more

Personal Reflections on Rom Harré

I first met Rom Harré in the mid 1970s the when I was a student in England, and we met again in 1989 when I visited Georgetown University. Soon after joining the faculty at Georgetown in 1990, my research collaboration with Rom took off and we eventually published 7 books and 45 papers together. He ... see more

Harré’s Revolutions

In December 2017 professor Rom Harré turned 90 years old. What better opportunity exist to reflect on and celebrate an astonishing career spanning more than 60 years of original contributions to philosophy and the development of human and Social sciences. The aim of this book is celebrating Rom and ... see more

Similar books and articles

Emotion and Memory: The Second Cognitive Revolution.Rom Harré - 1994 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 37:25-.
Cognitive science: a philosophical introduction.Rom Harré - 2002 - Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.
Ayn Rand and the cognitive revolution in psychology.Robert L. Campbell - 1999 - Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 1 (1):107-134.
Cognition, consciousness, and the cognitive revolution.John D. Greenwood - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (2):209-210.
The cognitive revolution from an ecological point of view.Edward Reed - 1997 - In David Martel Johnson & Christina E. Erneling (eds.), The Future of the Cognitive Revolution. Oxford University Press. pp. 261--273.
Reassessing the cognitive revolution.Stuart Shanker - 1997 - In David Martel Johnson & Christina E. Erneling (eds.), The Future of the Cognitive Revolution. Oxford University Press. pp. 45--54.

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