Over the previous decade, Robert E. Lana had attempted to
understand the enterprise of psychology as a totality. Such an
attempt was unpopular in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s but had become
increasingly more popular to psychologists in the 1970s. After
considerable study, he became convinced that the twin vehicles for
such a task were the history of the field and the epistemological
contexts into which psychological theories fit. Originally
published in 1976, the initial chapters in this volume are devoted
to explaining, through history, the major epistemological ideas
either implicit or explicit in modern psychological theory. Later
chapters are studies of the epistemological contexts that, in part,
yield modern psychological theory.
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