Mevcut:*
Library | Materyal Türü | Barkod | Yer Numarası | Durum |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... Pamukkale Merkez Kütüphanesi | Kitap | 0060479 | BF311.L29 1997 | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Özet
Özet
Most previous research on human cognition has focused on problem-solving, and has confined its investigations to the laboratory. As a result, it has been difficult to account for complex mental processes and their place in culture and history. In this startling - indeed, disco in forting - study, Jean Lave moves the analysis of one particular form of cognitive activity, - arithmetic problem-solving - out of the laboratory into the domain of everyday life. In so doing, she shows how mathematics in the 'real world', like all thinking, is shaped by the dynamic encounter between the culturally endowed mind and its total context, a subtle interaction that shapes 1) Both tile human subject and the world within which it acts. The study is focused on mundane daily, activities, such as grocery shopping for 'best buys' in the supermarket, dieting, and so on. Innovative in its method, fascinating in its findings, the research is above all significant in its theoretical contributions. Have offers a cogent critique of conventional cognitive theory, turning for an alternative to recent social theory, and weaving a compelling synthesis from elements of culture theory, theories of practice, and Marxist discourse. The result is a new way of understanding human thought processes, a vision of cognition as the dialectic between persons-acting, and the settings in which their activity is constituted. The book will appeal to anthropologists, for its novel theory of the relation of cognition to culture and context; to cognitive scientists and educational theorists; and to the 'plain folks' who form its subject, and who will recognize themselves in it, a rare accomplishment in the modern social sciences.
Reviews (1)
Choice Review
This book is the welcome extension of a chapter in Everyday Cognition, ed. by B. Rogoff and J. Lave (CH, Sep '84), that Lave wrote with Michael Murtaugh and Olivia de la Rocha. It reports the extensive and in-depth evaluation of "just plain folks" in her Adult Math Project. The rich presentation of real world data, mostly from shopping in grocery stores, is used to support an increased concern with the interaction or "dialectic" between the individual and the environment. The results are strongly critical of the classic argument for skill transfer--specifically mathematics from the stage of acquisition to application. A limited cognitive theory that would leave strategies independent of where they are learned and where they are used also suffers. A recent antidote to the view that cognitive theory is not relevant beyond the laboratory, however, is Donald Norman's The Psychology of Everyday Things (CH, Oct '88). This book might be read with Cognition in Practice in order to help maintain perspective, for the study of real people in everyday situations is an important psychological concern. Lave continues to make significant contributions to this area of research. Level: advanced undergraduates and graduate students. P. L. Derks College of William and Mary
Table of Contents
| List of figures |
| List of tables |
| Preface |
| 1 Introduction: psychology and anthropology I |
| Part I Theory in Practice |
| 2 Missionaries and cannibals (indoors) |
| 3 Life after school |
| 4 Psychology and anthropology II |
| Part II Practice in Theory |
| 5 Inside the supermarket (outdoors) and from the veranda |
| 6 Out of trees of knowledge into fields for activity |
| 7 Through the supermarket |
| 8 Outdoors: a social anthropology of cognition in practice |
| Notes |
| References |
