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Until recently, most books and articles on Piaget's theory, whether
laudatory or critical, were written by psychologists or, more
rarely, epistemologists, who had had no direct contact with the
research that provided the basis for the theoretical constructs,
nor with the ongoing work on the theory itself. These authors, who
looked into the theory, so to speak, from the outside, often noted
aspects that were less visible to those working "inside" the theory
and in this way raised a number of important questions. However,
because most of these authors were psychologists, they often
overlooked the main thrust of Piaget's work, which is
epistemological. Many complained about a gap between the theory and
the experimental data as reported. Such criticism may be justified,
at least in part, if the theory is taken to be a psychological
theory. But Piaget himself always emphasized his epistemological
orientation; with this in view, the methodology of the research and
its links to the conceptual framework of the theory appear in a
different guise. The value of a given methodology depends on its
contribution to the theory for which it was designed. The gap
between theory and experiment that was frequently criticized is, in
fact, the gap between the psychological and the epistemic subject.
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