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Possibility and Necessity - Volume 2 (Paperback, Minnesota Archive Editions Ed.)
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Possibility and Necessity - Volume 2 (Paperback, Minnesota Archive Editions Ed.)
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Possibility and Necessity was first published in 1987. Minnesota
Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable
books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the
original University of Minnesota Press editions.This two-volume
work--Jean Piaget's last--was published in France in 1981 and 1983
and is available now for the first time in English translation.
Reflecting the preoccupations and methodologies of his later years,
Possibility and Necessity combines theoretical interpretation with
detailed summaries of the experiments Piaget and his colleagues
used to test their hypotheses.Volume 2 presents a series of
experiments documenting the way children between the ages of four
or five and eleven to thirteen come to develop a grasp of necessity
and its role in understanding the world about them. The experiments
show how children proceed from an initial level (at four or five
years) of pseudo-necessities, where they see the world as
necessarily what it appears to be without the existence of other
possibilities, to an intermediate level (at six to ten years),
where pseudo-necessities give way to increasingly rich arrays of
possibilities, and a final stage (at eleven to thirteen years),
where children are able to select among these multiple
possibilities the one that fits all the data. This stage represents
the optimal level of understanding reality, which is now seen by
the child as infinitely variable yet coherent and lawful.
Psychologically, this lawfulness corresponds to a sense of
necessity, or certainty.Volume 2 thus completes the theory
presented in Volume 1 (The Role of Possibility in Cognitive
Development) by showing how cognitive development is mediated on
the one hand by a dialectical process of ever-expanding
possibilities and, on the other, by increasingly delimiting
necessities. In demonstrating how this process operates in
psychological development--and in pointing out analogies in the
history of science -- Piaget gave his genetic epistemology its
final and most accomplished form. The acquisition of knowledge is
thus shown to be the result of two complementary processes: the
formation of possibilities and the grasping of necessary laws and
constraints in the construction of a reasoned representation of the
external world.
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