A Framework for European Thought on Psychology, Education, and Health Based on Foucault’s The Order of Things
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Order of Things
1.2. Narrative Research
1.3. Situating Foucault’s Views for the Narrative Researcher
2. Method
The Three Historical Periods
3. Results of Conducting the Narrative Research
3.1. Language, Value, Being
3.2. Psychology, Education, and Health
3.3. Ordering from Question-Asking
3.4. Question Responses in the Modern Period of Ordering
4. Significance of the Analysis
4.1. Three Aspects of Order
4.1.1. Renaissance
4.1.2. Classical
4.1.3. Modern
4.2. The Forms of Question-Asking
4.3. Implications
- The success of employing particular psychological methods with respect to research and treatment depends on the focus of human thought demonstrated by the particular person or group of people being investigated (Nash 2020b).
- True or false questions are an incompatible form of evaluation when the method of learning is a recitation of signs, as it is predominantly in primary schooling (Steiner et al. 2020).
- When education is dependent on making fine distinctions among various particular facts, as is common in secondary education, knowledge of these facts is best determined by answering true or false questions (Schuwirth and Van Der Vleuten 2004).
- When the aim of learning is incorporating the unknown into the known, as generally is the interest in higher education, evaluation should concentrate on asking questions of learners that begin with the most objective knowledge and expand to those questions that provide increasingly subjective responses (Nash 2021c).
- As the focus of human thought in both the Renaissance and Classical period, though still recognizable in the Modern period, is incommensurable with thought in the Modern period, education at all levels should strive to answer questions ranging from the most objective to the increasingly subjective, rather than prescribing a period demanding recitation similar to Renaissance thinking, or following minute identification—necessary in the Classical period. Consequently, the education that is most compatible with the Modern period in coming to know the unknown can be identified as self-directed learning (Nash 2020a) based on the type and order of questions asked, outlined in Table 5.
- Diseases of memory fit well with the view of human thought that was the focus of the Renaissance; thus, health related to memory is best understood through a reinterpretation of signs rather than evaluation of organs, as is expected in the Modern period of thought (Wright 2022).
- ASD and ADHD (Nash 2021b) are evident as health concerns in educational settings where learning to discriminate and attend to finely divided details is important; to this extent, they arise as health concerns when people are required to make fine discriminations as they would in the Classical period. Self-directed learning avoids the health issues evident in educational settings that focus on evaluating learners in relation to answering true and false questions (Steiner et al. 2020).
- The more that the Modern period concentrates its specific concern on the need for self to confront other, the more that depression and anxiety will continue, and increasingly represent, the most prominent health issues for society (Nash 2021a).
4.4. Limitations
To each of the sciences of man it offers a background, which establishes it and provides it with a fixed ground and, as it were, a homeland; it determines the cultural area—the chronological and geographic boundaries—in which that branch of knowledge can be recognized as having validity; but it also surrounds the sciences of man with a frontier that limits them and destroys, from the outset, their claim to validity within the element of universality.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Fundamental Aspects of Order | |||
---|---|---|---|
Period of European Thought | Language | Value | Being |
Renaissance | Recognition of signatures | Resemblance to God’s perfection | Structure dependent on signs |
Classical | Connection to original cries | Accumulation of wealth | Structure dependent on “I” |
Modern | Conjugation of verbs | Production by labor | Structure dependent on organic function |
Three Aspects of Order | |||
---|---|---|---|
Period of European Thought | Psychology | Education | Health |
Renaissance | Thought in accordance with signatures | Recitation of resemblances | An acceptance of signs |
Classical | Thought in accordance with distinctions | Incremental addition of facts | Adhering to the norm |
Modern | Thought in accordance with other | Knowledge through subjects | Optimal organic function |
Modern Period Era | Model of Psychological Reasoning |
---|---|
19th century | biological |
Cusp, 19th/20th century | economic |
20th century | linguistic |
Period of European Thought | Form of Question-Asking to Provide Knowledge |
---|---|
Renaissance | Responses indicated and dictated by signs |
Classical | Those eliciting “true” and “false” answers |
Modern | Asking when, where, who, what, how, why |
Type of Question Asked | Response in Modern Period |
---|---|
when | 19th century → now |
where | Originating in France, Germany, and Austria |
who | August Comte, Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud |
what | Philology, Economics, Biology |
how | Developing thought through a hierarchy of subjects |
why | Creation of “man” as the focus of order |
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Nash, C. A Framework for European Thought on Psychology, Education, and Health Based on Foucault’s The Order of Things. Histories 2022, 2, 222-240. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030018
Nash C. A Framework for European Thought on Psychology, Education, and Health Based on Foucault’s The Order of Things. Histories. 2022; 2(3):222-240. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030018
Chicago/Turabian StyleNash, Carol. 2022. "A Framework for European Thought on Psychology, Education, and Health Based on Foucault’s The Order of Things" Histories 2, no. 3: 222-240. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030018
APA StyleNash, C. (2022). A Framework for European Thought on Psychology, Education, and Health Based on Foucault’s The Order of Things. Histories, 2(3), 222-240. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030018