
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1990
Pages: 377-388
Series: Recent Research in Psychology
ISBN (Hardback): 9780387973111
Full citation:
, "The significance of Bühler's "axiomatic" and Vygotsky's "general psychology" for theoretical psychology and its persistent monism-pluralism-debate", in: Recent trends in theoretical psychology, Berlin, Springer, 1990


The significance of Bühler's "axiomatic" and Vygotsky's "general psychology" for theoretical psychology and its persistent monism-pluralism-debate
pp. 377-388
in: Michael E. Hyland, William J. Baker, René van Hezewijk, Terwee (eds), Recent trends in theoretical psychology, Berlin, Springer, 1990Abstract
One of the issues plaguing contemporary theoretical psychology concerns the question whether our discipline should proceed on a pluralistic or monistic epistemic base. Two historical analyses of a crisis in psychology, those of Bühler and Vygotsky, are discussed because they seem to apply as prototypes to this strategic alternative. A comparative review shows that this common suggestion is untenable. Both views, albeit differing in other respects, share the goal of a non-eclectic unification of psychology in non-empiricist terms. The relevance of Vygotsky's "General" and Bühler's "Axiomatic Psychology" to modern attempts at a conceptual and methodological refoundation of psychology is considered.
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1990
Pages: 377-388
Series: Recent Research in Psychology
ISBN (Hardback): 9780387973111
Full citation:
, "The significance of Bühler's "axiomatic" and Vygotsky's "general psychology" for theoretical psychology and its persistent monism-pluralism-debate", in: Recent trends in theoretical psychology, Berlin, Springer, 1990