Jesuit Online Bibliography

The History of Christianity and the First Principles of Development: Linear Time, Interiority, Structure

Author:
Book Title:
Development: The History of a Psychological Concept
Format:
Book Chapter
Year:
2021
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Place published:
Cambridge, U.K.
Language:
Abstract:

The first principles behind the developmental idea are linear time, interiority and staged structure. ‘Development’ is one particular historical way of conceptualizing the primary principle of change; in it, human time is an attempt at successful ‘recapitulation’ (a term that would reappear with modern developmental psychology’s founder, G. Stanley Hall) of Adam’s initial failure. In monotheism, time constructs interiority as permanence, ‘the mind’, in contrast with the temporary visitations of pagan or shamanic religion. Medieval psychology saw a proliferation of its ‘faculties’ (memory, imagination, judgement) and ‘operations’ (abstraction, attention, consciousness, logical reasoning, information-processing), which penetrated both the monastic and the humanist idea of the individual. Augustine’s ‘six ages’ of man gave the lifespan a fixed structure. Following the Reformation, change in the elect minority was seen either as instantaneous or as a stadial sequence: Jansenists and Calvinists on the one hand, Jesuits and Arminians on the other, disputed the function of human agency in relation to divine determinism.

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What (Subjects):
When (Centuries):
Worldcat URL:
Publisher URL:
Page Range:
22-68
ISBN:
9781108980845
9781108833479
DOI: