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The concept of development in contextualism
Authors:Richard M Lerner  Marjorie B Kauffman
Institution:1. The Pennsylvania State University U.S.A.;2. Now at Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, U.S.A.
Abstract:Contextualism, a world view or paradigm which suggests the role of social, cultural, and historical change in individual development, became the focus of increasing interest throughout the 1970s. Nevertheless, despite the suggestion that contextualism offered a new philosophical position from which to derive concepts and theories of development, criticism occurred because it was believed that the dispersive nature of contextualism obviated the formulation of a useful definition of development. We review the characteristics of the contextual paradigm and argue for a principled integration (as opposed to an eclectic one) between selected features of contextualism and of organicism. The former approach offers a dispersive view of the nature of variables involved in development and the latter provides an integrative one. We attempt to forge a probabilistic epigenetic, or developmental-contextual, paradigm for the study of human development, one which relies on the concept of integrative levels and which conceives of the causal variables of development as interacting in a temporally probabilistic manner.
Keywords:Reprint requests should be sent to Richard M  Lerner  College of Human Development  The Pennsylvania State University  University Park  PA 16802  
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