Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
331474 New Ideas in Psychology 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

In 1964, Conrad Waddington (1905–1975) presented a paper in Geneva that led to an internal reassessment of the biological underpinnings of Jean Piaget's (1896–1980) theory. This in turn resulted in an overhaul of the theoretical framework upon which his stage theory of child development had been based, including his appeals to James Mark Baldwin's (1861–1934) “circular reaction.” In addition to leading to the emergence of what has elsewhere been called “Piaget's new theory,” this renovation also resulted in the update of the famous “Baldwin Effect.” Because aspects of the subsequent framework are of contemporary significance, this essay will review some of the work leading up to those updates. In reaching behind the translations to trace the sources of the arguments to which Piaget appealed, the resulting examination fills some of the gaps found in the secondary literature without quibbling over the “correct” English interpretation of translated French terms. We also go beyond how Piaget's writings have been understood in English and extract some useful additional ideas from his sources, including how to conceive of the social context in which development takes place. We see as a result how Waddington and his colleagues, including Paul Weiss (1898–1989), provided a constructive “existence proof” for the formal hierarchy of levels that Piaget had come to by other means.

► Extends the earlier discussion of Piaget's appeals to a formal hierarchy of levels. ► Synthesizes perspectives at the intersection between logic, biology, and psychology. ► Explicates the biological and formal roles played by the social in Piaget's theory. ► Affords a perspective of the Baldwin Effect that's consistent with current interests. ► Provides a further step along the bridge toward Piaget's “new theory”

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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