Domination et impérialisme en psychologie |
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Authors: | G. Tiberghien |
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Affiliation: | a Institut des sciences cognitives, 67, boulevard Pinel, 69675 Bron cedex, France b Laboratoire de psychologie expérimentale et quantitative, pôle Saint-Jean-d’Angély, université de Nice-Sophia-Antipolis, 223, route de Marseille, 83670 Barjols, France |
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Abstract: | We offer some arguments in support of the idea that the only goal the teaching and research system of the United States can serve is that of the global system to which it belongs, namely, domination. We show how, within the last few decades, French research in psychology - its issues, its institutions, its practices, its ethics - has undergone a process of Americanization that has turned it into a mainstream Western (and basically American) psychology. We point out some research trends that have contested this mainstream psychology, either because it appears too male chauvinist or liberal (opposition psychologies) or because it is grounded in the individualist and liberalist postulates of Western cultures (indigenous psychologies). Unfortunately, because dominant epistemology is governed by a principle of continuity, these contesting trends have not increased our scientific requirements; on the contrary, they have often led to anti-scientific approaches. It is still the task of psychology to break away from kwoledges and values of common sense. |
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Keywords: | Facteur d&rsquo impact É valuation scientifique Psychologie dominante Sciences cognitives Psychologies critiques Psychologies indigè nes |
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