Next Article in Journal
Connecting the Chinese Diaspora: See Boon Tiong and His Temple Networks in Singapore and Malacca
Next Article in Special Issue
The Network of Early Modern Printers and Its Impact on the Evolution of Scientific Knowledge: Automatic Detection of Awareness Relationships
Previous Article in Journal
How Democracy Can Undermine Peace: The Israeli–Palestinian Case
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Essay

A Framework for European Thought on Psychology, Education, and Health Based on Foucault’s The Order of Things

Department of Psychiatry, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada
Histories 2022, 2(3), 222-240; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030018
Submission received: 3 February 2022 / Revised: 10 June 2022 / Accepted: 6 July 2022 / Published: 12 July 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Frontiers in History)

Abstract

:
In European thought, the relationship among the fields of psychology, education, and health is both complex and obscured. Foucault’s acclaimed work, The Order of Things, offers a framework to evaluate their interconnection by identifying three distinct periods of European thought since the 16th century, with respect to the ordering of phenomena—Renaissance, Classical, and Modern. Theoretically dense and often difficult to decipher, the book’s categorization of language, value, and being has been understandably underused, yet it provides deep insights into what have come to be known as psychology, education, and health, and remains invaluable in understanding the origin, limits, and consequences of these fields. Investigated is how Foucault’s analysis can be interpreted, concerning the development of these areas in each of the three periods of European thought. An approach based on narrative research appraises the analysis offered in the book. The results, presented for the first time in table form, compare these three periods, demonstrating a continuing practical value to Foucault’s insights. With the aid of the framework presented by these tables, the boundaries and relationship of psychology, education, and health become clear, and their limitations—plus potential solutions to them—can be identified to mitigate anticipated negative consequences.

1. Introduction

The relationship among psychology, education, and health within European thought is an important foundational consideration with respect to the way in which their association is ordered, providing the basis for how these disciplines intersect and diverge. It is one that remains complex and unclear (Frankham et al. 2020; Zürcher et al. 2019; O’Higgins et al. 2018). With no evidently necessary connection, these fields have recently been joined in various ways in a number of investigations in European thought, including, but not limited to: (1) the use of mobile-based psychological interventions to provide education regarding mental health (Ebert et al. 2018); (2) patient education with respect to healthcare through the elimination of psychological jargon (Wittink and Oosterhaven 2018); (3) the adoption of a health approach to psychological interventions focused on psycho-education (Horlings and Hein 2018); (4) the use of psychological measures to explore health literacy and health education (Sukys et al. 2019); (5) a psychological analysis of personality traits with reference to education and health (Luchetti et al. 2021); and (6) a focus on the mental health of international university students from the perspective of psychology and education researchers (Cao et al. 2021). For these and other investigations undertaken by researchers with respect to European thought, it would be important to know the confines and presuppositions for each of psychology, education, and health, and their relationship to each other.

1.1. The Order of Things

The Order of Things: The Archeology of Human Sciences was first published by the French historian of ideas, Michel Foucault, in 1966 under the title Les mots et les choses: Une archéologie des sciences humaines (Foucault 1966). It was translated to English in 1970 (Foucault [1970] 1989) and ranks number 66 in Le Monde’s 100 Books of 20th Century (Savigneau 1999), continuing to hold interest for scholars in psychology, education, and health with respect to their research. Recent articles based on ideas from this book have been used in the analyses of these empirical studies: understanding emotions in policy studies (Durnová 2018), critical and theoretical reflection on the current mathematics educational objectives for Indigenous students in Australia (Hughes 2021), and the role of social media and the internet in providing credible, reliable, and objective sources of sexual health information for young people (Fraser et al. 2021).
Noting the complexity of The Order of Things since its translation, over the years, researchers from various perspectives have attempted to summarize the work and make it intelligible (Moore 1971; Jahoda 1972; Kennedy 1979; Fornet-Betancourt et al. 1987; Descombes 2016). Yet, although interest in the book has remained for more than fifty years, there has been no attempt until now to lessen the complexity of Foucault’s work with respect to the interrelation of psychology, education, and health in order to point to the boundaries and limitations inherent to these fields.
This author was drawn to investigating The Order of Things as the means for assessing a connection among psychology, education, and health because it is indicative of the tradition of social history that first compelled this author to undertake narrative research. Furthermore, Foucault’s interest was in creating a general structure for the development of scientific ideas. In doing so, he describes the type of theoretical digging he undertook to create this history of ideas as an archeology (Foucault [1970] 1989)—a way of encountering and creating history that is particularly well-suited to the type of exploration undertaken in narrative research.

1.2. Narrative Research

Narrative research is one of the five methods of qualitative inquiry (phenomenological psychology, grounded theory, discourse analysis, and intuitive inquiry representing the other four (Wertz et al. 2011)). It provides access to: (1) the varying perspectives of a story that can be constructed to make experience comprehensible (Bruner 1986, p. 37); (2) the treatment of data as stories (Emden 1998) where narrative data are the result of a communication exchange (Overcash 2003); and (3) an understanding of how human actions are related to the social context in which they occur, including where and how (Moen 2006). Unique to narrative research is the aim of developing an in-depth exploration of the meanings assigned to experiences by their narrators (Salkind 2010). The narrative researcher works to investigate individual stories to obtain a rich discourse of experience. The emphasis is on storied experience in whatever way it is provided by the narrator (Salkind 2010). This story is one that can be presented either orally or in text where facts are important because of how, and in the way, they are understood by the narrator throughout the story (Salkind 2010).
In choosing narrative research to investigate The Order of Things, it is recognized both that Foucault tells a story about the differences among the three periods of scientific thinking he identifies and, at the same time, that this story does not follow an obvious literary structure. In this regard, a story is something with a beginning, middle, and end (Boje 2006), and the plot of the story is what takes the reader along this intellectual journey, giving shape to temporality (Baroni 2021). With its extravagant style of writing that has been described as “baroque” (Rajan 1998, p. 449), the meandering plot is what makes the analysis offered in the book so difficult to decipher and why narrative research—in its aim of searching for the plot—is a preferred method to examine the work. Using narrative research, the data are able to be identified, extracted, and interpreted if time is taken and concentration maintained to perform the investigation.

1.3. Situating Foucault’s Views for the Narrative Researcher

Unlike other well-known researchers assessing the limits of scientific pursuits from the perspective of what universally counts as rational (Popper 1959; Kuhn 1970; Lakatos 1970), Foucault argues that the development of modes of rationality in European thought are specific and transient—differing from another alternative view of science (that it is primarily an irrational enterprise (Feyerabend 1975)). As such, what counts as reasonable from Foucault’s perspective is not timeless (Hacking 1979), although it is still rational. It is in this way that Foucault develops his idea that scientific problems in European thought have changed historically and the identities of individual periods can be known, compared, and analyzed. Furthermore, in arguing different periods in European thought to be incommensurable in relation to ordering, clear sense can be made of the idea that certain propositions in science are “not even wrong” (Modell 2011). And although there were other social scientists at the time of the publication of The Order of Things who also elucidated a micro-scale analysis of the history of scientific research from an interpretive rather than normative perspective (Gilbert 1976), Foucault’s work was both the most detailed and has remained the most lasting in this endeavor. For these reasons, unlike other perspectives, it still retains usefulness as a conceptual system for European thought.
In undertaking this analysis of The Order of Things as a narrative researcher, it is important to take into consideration Foucault’s cautions. In the “Foreward to the English Edition”, Foucault offers advice to his “ideal reader” of The Order of Things, beginning with this statement: “This foreward should perhaps be headed ‘Directions for Use’” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. ix). He lists five important points to remember when reading this work: (1) Recognize that the study he had undertaken was “a relatively neglected field” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. ix); (2) read the book “as a comparative, and not a symptomatological study” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. x) of the three periods of ordering; (3) consider that the book is not a usual history of science, that the aim is to try to bring to light “what has eluded that consciousness” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xi); and (4) know that The Order of Things was intended as a beginning to an investigation that remained incomplete because of the “problem of change” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xii), the “problem of causality” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xiii), and the “problem of the subject” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xiv). In this way, the only type of further investigation Foucault is against, regarding The Order of Things, in augmenting his work is “that which gives absolute priority to the observing subject” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xv). Finally, (5) do not consider The Order of Things the work of a Structuralist, “it is only too easy to avoid the trouble of analyzing such work by giving it an admittedly impressive-sounding, but inaccurate, label” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xv).
What Foucault thinks is of concern regarding how his work is to be approached is critical to the narrative researcher. How narrators view themselves and identify with others within their narration is the focus of narrative research (Salkind 2010). In contrast to hypothesis-testing, the narrative researcher aims to describe and understand rather than measure and predict. The concentration for the narrative researcher is on understanding the meaning of the narrator rather than statistical analysis; language and discourse are the data situated within a cultural context rather than trying to be context-free (Salkind 2010). As such, the following analysis is intended to adhere to the advice of Foucault on how his work should be read and what type of reading should be avoided.

2. Method

In analyzing texts, narrative research aims primarily to inductively understand meanings found in the text, organizing them in some more conceptual level of understanding (Salkind 2010). One method involves a close reading of the text and extracting significant passages for consideration. The narrative researcher’s concern is to look inductively for patterns that might reflect the researcher’s prior knowledge about the phenomena and, most importantly, reflect the narration (Salkind 2010). The process of analysis pieces together data to make what is not apparent visible in determining what is significant and linking, until then, seemingly unrelated aspects of the narrated experience together (Salkind 2010).
The narrative research method undertaken to examine The Order of Things was a detailed reading over a two-year period of the Routledge Classics paperback edition of the English translation first published in 2002. This involved not only a twice-reading of the 422-page paperback book, cover to cover, but also comparing and contrasting different sections and themes in relation to particular issues on the second reading. Foucault, although discussing three scientific periods of ordering phenomena in his book—Renaissance, Classical, and Modern—focuses primarily on comparing the Classical and Modern periods. His interest in the Renaissance period is transitory and does not follow the same detailed structure of interpretation he provides for the Classical and Modern periods (with greater attention paid to the Classical period). As such, an investigator of what Foucault has to say about the Renaissance period (beginning for the purpose of his analysis in the 16th century (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 421)) must dig deeply into the little he offers about the Renaissance period to compare it in a way that is similar to the relationships he draws between the Classical and Modern periods. The reason why this excavation of Foucault’s analysis of the Renaissance period is of equal relevance in regard is that, by comparing the three periods, Foucault’s argument—regarding the periodic, incommensurable changes in scientific reasoning—becomes evident.
The lack of an index to the book is a serious hindrance to proceeding in a narrative analysis of The Order of Things, given there is no helpful way for a researcher to find themes, ideas, and references in the work. This is especially so since it is only relatively recently that an electronic version of the volume has been available to scrutinize (Foucault 1970), the pagination of which does not correspond directly to the paperback edition. Therefore, to undertake a narrative analysis of the book, the chapter headings offered by Foucault must be used as the starting point for interpreting the structure presented.

The Three Historical Periods

There are three historical periods Foucault brings to the reader’s attention: the Renaissance, Classical, and Modern. Although the three historical periods are discussed chronologically, it is the three middle chapters, amounting to almost half of the work, that set the parameters for the discussion. These are: Chapter 4—Speaking (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 86–135), Chapter 5—Classifying (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 136–79), and Chapter 6—Exchanging (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 180–232). Together, they represent the three fundamental ways that Foucault sees the Classical period as ordering things. By understanding these divisions as pivotal to Foucault’s thinking, a narrative research approach can move forward to Part II of the book, where Foucault’s ordering of the Modern period is revealed in Chapter 8 through its title—“Labour, Life and Language” (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 272–326). It is in moving forward to Chapter 8 that it becomes evident that the evolution of thought from the Classical period to the Modern came with a shift in interest in the same domain from ‘Speaking to Language’ (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 256, 257), from ‘Classifying to Life’ (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 175, 248, 292), and from ‘Exchanging to Labour’ (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 273, 275). What remained to be realized in this analysis was the common categories under which these shifts took place. Yet, before this could be interpreted for the purpose of this analysis, the similarly relevant categories pertaining to the Renaissance needed to be recognized.
Unlike his account of the Classical or Modern periods, Foucault has not provided chapter headings that point researchers to what he identified as how things were ordered during the Renaissance. Nevertheless, by reading through both Chapter 2—“The Prose of the World” (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 19–50), and Chapter 3—“Representing” (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 51–85), the ideas of how the Renaissance was ordered in comparison to both the Classical and Modern periods can be disentangled. What Foucault argues is that during the Renaissance order was fundamentally dependent on a broad notion of resemblances (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 26, 29, 32)—if one thing resembled another, in whatever way, knowledge of the one thing represented what was known about the other. Ultimately, the end point of this resemblance was coming to know the mind of God (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 21). In this way, human utterances were the ideas of God (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 22), what was of value among humans was a relation to the perfection of God (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 20), and what represented being during the Renaissance was how closely living was structured to adhere to signs of God’s work (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 22). In this way, what is normally considered the superstitious nature of the Renaissance in looking for signs (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 29)—for example, in the stars or animal entrails (Ludwig 2005)—was instead, according to Foucault’s view, a completely structured way of trying to account for things. Although very different in understanding, Foucault is not alone in considering the Renaissance method of ordering the beginning of scientific thought because of its focus on ordering (Butterfield 1965).
According to Foucault’s analysis, what changed between the time of the Renaissance and that of the 17th and 18th centuries of the Classical period was that God, though still the end to all ordering, was no longer the focus. Rather, what Foucault labels “Mathesis and ‘Taxinomia’” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 79) now became not only the methods of reaching God, they were, in and of themselves, what was to be studied (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 79–84). This was the beginning of the importance of the infinitesimal in ordering sensations, wealth, and ideas into tables noting minute, precise, and microscopic changes. In making these fine observations, the observer now also came into focus with wondering what is the “I” that can make these distinctions—characterized in Descartes’s well known, 1637 phrase “cognito, ergo sum” (I think, therefore I am) (Descartes 1968, p. 53). With respect to language, words were no longer signs of God’s thoughts. Instead, built up through individual sounds represented by letters, words were the evolution in language of the initial cries of prehistoric ancestors. Foucault uses the example of the wild man of Aveyron to make the distinction between cries and words. “If the wild man of Aveyron did not attain to speech, it was because words remained for him merely the vocal marks of things and of the impressions that those things made upon his mind” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 102).
In Foucault’s estimation, what changed so that the Modern period of ordering emerged was attention shifting from who is the observer to what the observer is not, something Foucault considered to correspond with the founding of a transcendental philosophy (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 265). Science now became disassociated from searching for a connection to God. Instead, scientific reasoning became the search for what was not known. In effect, the known and unknown became a couplet, logically impossible to separate (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 251–52). The minute divisions of European thought during the Classical period no longer were the foundation for ordering (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 292). Within language, research shifted from the origin of letters and words to what was seen as an organic structure of verbs regarding their conjugations (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 313–27). The relationships among languages shifted once how language worked became key rather than similarities in letters and words that had been predominant in the Classical ordering of language—now seen as irrelevant (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 322). Regarding exchange, pinpointing the organic during the Modern period created the idea of economics over that of accumulated wealth (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 278). As such, value shifted from ownership to what labor was able to produce (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 341). Similarly, ordering was no longer related to a connection to God—as in the Renaissance—or to very particular features that could be precisely enumerated—as in the Classical period (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 288–89). This concentration also meant that being alive depended on the systems of differing internal organs that could and must be studied and understood independently (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 287–305).
In using narrative research to construct what it is that draws together each of these three aspects of these three periods of ordering in European thought, the narrative researcher cannot go beyond the distinctions found in The Order of Things. As Foucault himself does not bring together the connection among these ways of ordering, and it is not to be found in the chapter or section headings, the text itself must be examined through a close reading to find words that Foucault uses in describing all three periods. As such, although it might seem reasonable to refer to the three fundamental aspects of ordering Foucault recognizes in each of the three periods as “communication, value and being”, in the Routledge Classics 2002 English translation, Foucault never uses the word “communication” in this regard and, in a search of the online text for the word, “communication” appears only four times in the entire book, found in (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. xx, 31, 92, 171). He does, however, refer to “language” in each of the three periods and, in total, hundreds of times in the entire work (noted in a search of “language” with the online version of the book (Foucault 1970)). The reason why this is not an ideal choice, though, is that “language” is also used by Foucault as a principle of ordering, that is particular to the Modern period (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 420–21). Therefore, if there were another word that could take the place of “language” in the fundamental ordering that was specified in the text itself, this would be preferred. However, no more appropriate word was able to be located in the text. As such, “language, value and being” were determined to be the best fit in creating a table representing Foucault’s method of ordering phenomena.

3. Results of Conducting the Narrative Research

In undertaking to piece together a structure that could be used to demonstrate the interconnections among psychology, education, and health based on The Order of Things, fundamental relationships were required to be developed with respect to aspects of ordering phenomena in general. These fundamental aspects were recognized as language, value, and being.

3.1. Language, Value, Being

The following construction in Table 1 represents the narrative analysis of Foucault’s three periods of European Thought with respect to the three aspects he considers fundamental to ordering in specifying them as “The New Empiricities” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 272).
If the new “empiricities” Foucault recognizes regarding language, value, and being are used as headings to organize the type of statements he makes with respect to language, value, and being in relation to the Renaissance, Classical, and Modern period, then a comparative structure is developed that can be easily visualized with the aid of a table. The result is that each of the rows in Table 1 represents a fully intact conceptual system incompatible with the other systems of ordering. Rather than the Renaissance and Classical periods being ill-formed versions of scientific ordering that had to evolve into the Modern period to be understandable, these three systems are each complete in themselves and have little relationship among them with respect to the presuppositions they demand. As such, all of these systems of thought have well-defined boundaries and are based on evident rules.
The Renaissance, rather than a period of confused and apprehensive thought as generally assumed (Kinsman 2020), started with the notion that God’s thoughts are everywhere, that they are subtle, but can be disentangled by comparing similar signatures left of God’s perfection in signs. As such, there was an exact and learnable system for ordering the world.
With respect to the Classical period, there was a seismic shift in thinking that changed all that was then presupposed from that of the Renaissance. This shift differs both theoretically and functionally from Kuhn’s notion of a revolution in paradigm (Brenner 1994) as Foucault sees ordering as being based on structures of human thought rather than sociological influences (Sciortino 2021). During the Classical period, although God was the beginning and end to inquiry, luck in outcomes and the structured and infinitesimal observation scientists could undertake left no place for God during the process of ordering (Broberg 2020). Furthermore, the idea of the observer as affecting the outcome of inquiry was brought to consciousness with the identification of “I” (St. Pierre 2021).
The Modern period brought with it again an entire change of perspective in European thought. God was no longer a relevant consideration in ordering from the point of view of science. Rather, the idea of organs having particular and independent functions from each other that could be studied in isolation was born—organic was then differentiated from the inorganic (Mader 2016) and found to be of use in the ordering of European thought in the study of phenomena through disciplinary subjects (McGushin 2005). The role of science thus became identified with what is known in relation to the pursuit of the unknown (Polanyi 1966).

3.2. Psychology, Education, and Health

The construction of Table 1 represents a collation of analysis and findings in highlighting the three fundamental aspects of order that can be identified in The Order of Things. Table 1 may now be used to examine how this ordering relates to psychology, education, and health as distinct disciplines in European thought. This can be determined by adhering to Foucault’s contention that “three pairs of function and norm, conflict and rule, signification and system completely cover the entire domain of what can be known about man” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 390), with the results of this analysis presented in Table 2.
Although the divisions of study of psychology, education, and health are comprehensible to researchers in the Modern period, psychology was unknown before the Modern period. Yet, sense can be made of what scholars in the Renaissance and Classical periods would consider in relation to what is now called psychology if the three couplets Foucault presents as covering the entire domain of knowledge are considered. Still, when assessing these couplets, Foucault provides additional information in only a few paragraphs of his book that might be missed without a close reading.
Throughout almost the entirety of The Order of Things, Foucault confirms that since the 16th century, there have been three distinct periods of ordering in European thought. These have been highlighted. However, on page 392, Foucault reveals that the Modern period is actually not uniform—there have been three sub-eras into which the Modern period can be divided. The first, arising in the 19th century, was the biological model. During this era, psychology was concerned with the dichotomy between function and norm. After that, as the 19th century transitioned to the 20th, the economic model could be applied to psychology as the locus of conflicts with respect to rule-following took hold of the imagination. Following this era was the beginning of psychology related to the significance of different systems of thinking with the linguistic model. These changes over the Modern period are presented in Table 3. Foucault reveals these changes in thinking regarding psychology to be the influence of three thinkers who originated these changes in the domains of ordering during the Modern period—Comte, Marx, and Freud (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 392).
It is important to mention this change to ordering during the Modern period. The reason is, as Foucault clearly states (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 390), that “psychology is fundamentally a study of man in terms of functions and norms (functions and norms which can, in a secondary fashion, be interpreted on the basis of conflicts and significations, rules and systems)”. Yet, this pronouncement occurs before he acknowledges that the Modern period has itself modified how it orders psychological reasoning into three distinct eras. Based on what he relates two pages later, it becomes clear that, in interpreting Table 2, psychology, in this regard, became an area that provides assessment of the signification of what is thought based on various systems of interpretation, “Freud… brought the knowledge of man closer to its philological and linguistic model” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 393). In this same regard, education becomes the effort to diminish intellectual and social conflict through the teaching of various rules. Health then concerns the body’s functions in relation to what is revealed to be the norm through empirical testing.

3.3. Ordering from Question-Asking

From Foucault’s tri-system of ordering, how information is recognized for the purpose of ordering can be interpreted. As such, questions need to be posed to identify what things are legitimate as knowledge to be ordered. As Foucault has been interpreted here, the legitimacy of questions changed dramatically over the three periods of European thought, as seen in Table 4.
During the Renaissance, what counted as objective knowledge was a response an investigator would give when presented with individual signs. Each sign was considered to point to the thoughts originating with God and the role of the researcher was to identify the correct response when presented with a sign. Although Foucault does not provide an example, one that might be supposed is the continued concern of Renaissance scholars to adhere to the idea that the orbits of the planets must be circular and earth the center of the solar system because God was perfection. This necessitated finding a way to demonstrate this perfection (Koestler 1986). It was not that Copernicus, in 1543, was the first astronomer to recognize that the orbit of the planets was not best approached through circular motion (Copernicus 1543), it was that scientific ordering at that time related to finding resemblances with respect to the perfection of God—a completely different approach to ordering than was no longer accepted after the Classical period took hold of the European imagination.
Once the Classical period ensued, and the focus of knowledge became the gathering of facts infinitesimally divided, question-asking was no longer related to interpreting God’s thoughts. Instead, the focus was on whether a thing was true or false (Deacon 2002, p. 437). This was best determined by these binary responses in observing and documenting the natural world. In his section on Classifying, Foucault clarifies that this new domain of the empirical concentrated on what was describable and orderable with the use of tables.
The Modern period, concerned with the functional interpretation of systems and rules, requires a form of question-asking that depends on the extent of language usage. As such, to order things, researchers are required to answer a series of questions starting from the most objective and obvious to those that require subjective interpretation. These questions, then, follow an objective to subjective order of posing: when, where, who, what, how, and why. It is this form of question-asking that has been described as moving from knowledge structures to inferring to decision making to metacognition (Flammer 1981).

3.4. Question Responses in the Modern Period of Ordering

In being a response to the type of questions posed, answers provide that which is to be ordered. The type of question-asking relevant to the Modern period can then be applied to Foucault’s account of the Modern period in The Order of Things. In asking when the Modern period of European thought originated, the answer is from the 19th century. It has continued from then until today. Where it began was in France, in Germany, and in Austria. With respect to who the forefathers were of the Modern period, Foucault recognizes Comte (1848, 1865) (the originator of positivism), Marx (1867, 1887) (the founder of the labor theory of economics), and Freud (1900, 1913) (for his understanding of the body function as depending on the subtleties of the subconscious). The research disciplines of philology, economics, and biology were what was introduced. How they were introduced was by the development of a hierarchy of subject areas (Comte 1839). Why it was this ordering was put into place is, according to Foucault, the idea of “man” as an entity to study—regarding what man is and what man is not—first came into being at this time. It is because of this new idea of man that this ordering was established. Before the Modern period, Foucault argues that the notion of man as something to be studied did not exist (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 421–22).

4. Significance of the Analysis

In discussing the significance of the analysis that has been provided of The Order of Things with respect to European thought regarding psychology, education, and health, references will first be made to Table 2 and a detailed explanation of the meaning of each of the nine cells. Following that, Table 4 will be considered in relation to this understanding that has been provided of Table 2.

4.1. Three Aspects of Order

Table 2 represents a grid comparing the three periods of ordering since the 16th century, identified by Foucault, in relation to three aspects of ordering in European thought: psychology, education, and health. This table is based on an interpretation of Table 1, which compared these same three periods with what Foucault reasoned were the three fundamental aspects of ordering. The individual cells of this grid will be elucidated upon from top to bottom and left to right, going in historical order and with respect to the dependent relationship of these aspects. Supporting texts for the analysis provided will be cited.

4.1.1. Renaissance

Although psychology did not exist as an area of study during the Renaissance, there was an understanding of what described the workings of the mind. In Table 2, this has been summarized as “thought in accordance with signatures”. What this means it that the focus of thought was on finding the obscured perfection of God’s thoughts in nature and all questions related to thinking were to be framed with this idea as the starting point (Blair 2000).
The perfection of nature was taken for granted, and that this perfection was known was revealed in ancient texts—the Bible and ancient Greek and Roman texts (Foucault [1970] 1989, pp. 400–1). There was nothing to question in this regard. The point of education during this time was to learn the texts and memorize the appropriate response that these texts demanded (Charlton 2007). Education, in this regard, was characterized by a master calling out the text to be engaged and the students reciting the appropriate answer to the call (Collins 2000).
Health was then an acceptance of the signs in accessing the signatures of God that came from a correct memorization of ancient knowledge, primarily, as given by the ancient physician, Galen (García Ballester et al. 2002). As such, health was right-thinking concerning God and interpreted by Galen, and had less to do with a focus on the actual physical health of the individual. Regardless of physical limitations, if a person had the right relationship to God’s signature through Galenic interpreted signs, that person was deemed to have health.

4.1.2. Classical

Still yet to be created as a discipline, “psychology” related to an orderly mind during the Classical period—a mind imbedded with a reverence for God, but focused on the particulars of God’s work, with little actual concern for God’s continuing role in those particulars (Kubrin 1967). In this regard, thought was in accordance with the ability to create appropriate categories with the potential for containing infinitesimally divided phenomena.
Education, from this standpoint, was learning how to categorize and hone the ability to recognize and examine objects closely for their minute differences, resulting in the incremental addition of facts as learning progressed. Learning itself, in the regard, was seen to take place in well-defined stages—each one dependent on and adding to the previous stage. Furthermore, to be characterized as educated, the learner was expected to master all the accumulated knowledge and be able to add to it in a similar, graded way—an idea first proposed by Leibniz in 1700 (Collins 2000, p. 232).
Once the infinitesimal was understood as having the ability to describe God’s work (with the creation of calculus by both Leibniz (1684) and Newton (1687)), then the idea of the norm could be born. With this birth was the notion of what was to be normally expected with respect to health. As such, people began to gauge their physical and mental health in relation to the norm. Health was then what was normal to expect given a number of ways in which people could be categorized (Lock and Nguyen 2018, p. 36), for example, by age, weight, diet, living conditions, geographic location, and family situation.

4.1.3. Modern

With the Modern period came the naming of the discipline of psychology proper (Bunge 1990). What distinguished this new discipline from previous studies that were thought-related was a concentration on what defined the self with respect to other (Abraham et al. 1998, p. 572). The self was that which was included within a personally defined boundary and the other was all that was outside that limit. The experience of self, differentiating it from other, was identified through brain processes (Vogeley and Gallagher 2011) which could be separated and studied individually.
Education, once psychology became its foundation (Thorndike 1910), now was a search for the unknown and an incorporation of the unknown into the known self (Egan 1997, pp. 43–44) by examining nature through individual and intellectually separate disciplines (Popkewitz 2011, p. 15). This became a never ending occupation, with the self continually searching for the various ways in which other could be defined, recognized, studied, and incorporated into the self through the study of well-defined subjects—a process of reorganizing institutional education that was fully structured by 1920 (Collins 2000, p. 235).
With the self as the focus of both psychology and education during the Modern period, health was now directly relevant to an ability to relate to the self—mentally and physically—as a lifestyle (Cockerham et al. 1997, p. 322). This health was dependent on how individual organs functioned and the aim was identifying the self with optimal organic functions as an adaption to the environment (Kovács 1998).

4.2. The Forms of Question-Asking

The ways in which European thought has evolved, according to the analysis of The Order of Things that has been provided for each of psychology, education, and health, are represented the discussion of Table 2. The ordering of these examined areas of thought regards different aspects of science. Science is based on the type of questions posed dependent on what counts as a question. Table 4 presents those questions considered legitimate in each of the three periods of European thought that have been examined.
Question-asking during the Renaissance was limited to asking for guidance in interpreting the way in which a sign was related to God’s signature. Foucault summarized that the “semantic web of resemblance in the sixteenth century is extremely rich” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 20). There are multiple notions of how things resemble each other, the purpose of which was to maintain and recognize God’s perfection. In this regard, “science” had a preoccupation with a memorization of all the signs that could point to this supremacy.
During the Classical period, the search for minute changes in how nature could be described meant that an aspect of inquiry was either something that was already described, or something that required a new name that would accurately categorize it. This was the period when the encyclopedia developed, detailing all the knowledge that had been distinguished and organized (Rosenberg 1999). To achieve this organization, something was recognized either as already ordered or not. Thus, the responses to questions that were most revealing in this regard were answered either by “true” or “false”—an idea originating (Schacter et al. 2012, p. 552) with Spinoza (Curley 1994).
With the Modern period, the self was now understood as the locus of objectivity (Kasulis 2018, p. 557), with those things that were most evident having the greatest objectivity, and those things that were less obvious and known through individual experience being inherently subjective (Leopold 2018). In this way, questions became narrativized, telling the story of the object while identifying the increasingly subjective nature of the investigation. The questions are thus ordered as such: when, where, who, what, how, and why, as represented in Table 5.

4.3. Implications

The implications of the analysis of Table 2 and Table 4 have much to do with the information provided in Table 3 concerning Foucault’s admission that, with respect to psychological reasoning, the Modern period can itself be divided into three models predominant in consecutive eras. What is important to note is that, from today’s standpoint, every one of these models of psychological reasoning is still apparent—although the biological and economic models are currently overshadowed by the linguistic. With respect to what this means regarding psychology, education, and health is now to be clarified.
Defining the limits of human thought, psychology is today primarily concerned with the distinction between self and other, as well as how self is able to become other in reducing prejudices (Greenwald and Banaji 1995). However, psychology has maintained the interest in memory (Bartsch et al. 2018; Schurgin and Flombaum 2018) that was most notable during the Renaissance when knowing each of the signs of God’s signatures was imperative. Furthermore, the focus on measurement, particularly of intelligence (Sternberg 2018; Petrides et al. 2018), is an aspect of psychology from the Classical period that remains a concentration of current research in psychology.
In comparison with psychology, education in the Modern period is the discipline concerned with the rules regarding the limits of human thought (Bruner 1997). Although the focus of higher education today is the continued search for what is unknown through asking questions, starting from what is most objective to those which are increasingly subjective (Wright and Osman 2018), in contrast, primary education still is based on reciting the alphabet, and counting and learning stories and songs by heart (Rose 2018) in the same way it was during the Renaissance. Secondary education, differing again, is dependent on answering true or false questions on tests of difficult to differentiate options in which the subtle differences have to be recognized (Harris and de Bruin 2018)—just as was the focus in the Classical period.
Regarding health, although health-related matters in European-influenced medicine are today investigated with respect to the distinct organs involved—as would be expected in the Modern period—similar to both psychology and education, mental health today concerns each of the three periods recognized by Foucault. These include diseases involving memory (as in the Renaissance (Engelhardt 2018)), those concerning attention (originating in the Classical period (Rorke 2001)), and those involving a disassociation with the self (the focus of the Modern period (Berrios 1996)). According to the American Psychiatric Association (APA) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) (American Psychiatric Association 2013), the diseases of memory include, but are not limited to, mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and Alzheimer’s. Those of attention involve disorders such as Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). There are depressive disorders and anxiety disorders, where the self seeks disassociation from thoughts, and diseases creating a disassociation with the body, such as body dysphoria.
Two things result from this analysis of these three disciplines. The first is that each of psychology, education, and health retains strong imprints of the ways of thinking developed in each of the Renaissance and the Classical period, although the Modern period of thought is upheld as the predominant interest. The point being made is not merely that modern trends and practices can be traced back to the previous historical periods. Instead, the essence is that although Foucault claims that each of psychology, education, and health are now in the Modern period, that, in actual practice, there are continuing influences from both the Renaissance and the Classical period in how ideas are ordered in each of psychology, education, and health. Yet, the second result is that the three periods are incommensurable with each other with respect to the evaluation and ordering of phenomena. Some important points regarding psychology, education, and health, that can be deduced and have also been previously and independently recognized (and will be cited) in considering (1) that each discipline retains strong imprints from the pre-Modern periods, and (2) that the three periods are incommensurable with each other, are the following:
  • 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

In a paper where the claims made are based on narrative research—in this case, the interpretation of one text within the intellectual milieu of other researchers who have also attempted the evaluation of it from various perspectives—the most relevant limitations regard the basis of the judgments that have been made as a narrative researcher.
The first is whether the text has been read as Foucault would have thought appropriate. Although it might be questioned why what Foucault thought about this analysis matters, especially as he is no longer alive, narrative research is primarily aimed at understanding the meanings intended by the narrator and organizing them in a conceptual level of understanding (Boje 2006). Foucault was very precise, though difficult to comprehend. Concerned fundamentally with the history of how things have been ordered, he supposedly “hated” that he was called a Structuralist (Dreyfus et al. 1982, p. vii) by other theorists who defined him in this way, calling them “half-witted” with “tiny minds’ (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. xv). Given his irritation at being misunderstood, it cannot be assumed that Foucault would have agreed with the results of this analysis. Still, the argument that has been provided in this paper has not made evaluations of Foucault to place him in any particular school of thought and has tried to keep to what Foucault stated as important in his book: “I’ve tried to see how, in scientific creation, the human subject will be defined as an individual who talks, who works, who lives” (Fornet-Betancourt et al. 1987, p. 112).
The second limitation is that even if Foucault (who died in 1984 of AIDS (Miller 1993)) might have approved of this analysis, it could be that there are important aspects to it that he would feel must be mentioned that have been left out. For example, once Foucault has completed his interpretation of the Modern period and the importance of his tri-analysis of it, he then considers where the idea of representation fits (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 394). His response is “But representation is not simply an object for the human sciences; it is, as we have just seen, the very field upon which the human sciences occur, and to their fullest extent; it is the general pedestal of that form of knowledge, the basis that makes it possible” (Foucault [1970] 1989, p. 396). This point to address was clearly important to Foucault, however, his reply does not negate his previous assessment nor alter it for the purpose of this understanding of Foucault in regards to psychology, education, and health. Rather, it merely reports representation as an a priori for this analysis.
A third limitation is that The Order of Things is a translation of the original French Les mots et les choses. As such, how the book was translated might differ from the original to the extent that some of the conclusions that have been drawn could be questionable. One way that they might, for example, is that both savoir and connaître are translated as “knowledge” in English. In this regard, there might be a subtleness to Foucault’s meaning of knowledge that is missed in The Order of Things. On the other hand, Foucault himself spoke English and the publication of The Order of Things was in 1970—giving Foucault fourteen years before his untimely death at 57 (Martin 1995, p. 57) to make changes to the English translation, had he thought they were necessary. The version of The Order of Things used in conducting this research was published as a hardcover by Routledge in 1989 (although the 2002 paperback version was the reference for this essay). Any changes Foucault might have made to the translation would have been present in it—there were none that were stated.
A fourth limitation is that this type of assessment to ground the disciplines of psychology, education, and health in European thought could be inappropriate. Although The Order of Things may be an influential book and Foucault had things to say about these topics, what he had to say about them might be judged as questionable. Habermas, for one, was not convinced by what he considered Foucault’s individualistic argument, considering Foucault a Post-Modernist in his assessment of Modernism. In this regard, he was openly hostile to Foucault (Burrell 1994, p. 3). “For Habermas, one must be careful to distinguish between reason itself and a subject-centred reason. If one does this successfully, then the project of modernity can be saved and a long list of Western thinkers can be despatched (sic) to the reserve shelves of social philosophy… namely… Foucault” (Dreyfus et al. 1982, p. 4). Yet, in intellectual competition with Foucault, Habermas perhaps let his personal feelings dictate his assessment of Foucault’s version of modernity. Merely because it might be an individualistic rather than sociological view of the Modern period does not mean it is necessarily wrong, as Habermas has judged. “Foucault and Habermas met in 1983 and 1984 but this meeting continued a debate in which they had been engaged for several years. It was unlikely that this exchange ever would have led to a dialogue because the protagonists defined ‘modernity’ in incompatible ways” (Burrell 1988, p. 221). It is here argued, contrary to Habermas, that value and important insights can be gained from Foucault’s understanding of the Modern period in relation to both his views on the Renaissance and Classical period. This is a position argued by other theorists as well (Ashenden and Owen 1999).
In reading through the position established with this narrative research, it becomes evident that a primary result is that the knowledge provided in each of the three periods elucidated by Foucault cannot be cross-evaluated. This is because he deems them incommensurable. This position is accepted as evident in the work that has been done in this report. However, if so, a fifth limitation would be whether the creation of tables—something corresponding to the Classical period—is relevant to today’s researchers in the Modern period. Yet, Foucault also argued that the Modern period, though focused on questions that migrate from the most objective to those that require deeper subjective investigation, still makes use of each of the forms of reasoning relevant since the 16th century. It is because the creation of tables permits the ordering of things in relation to boundaries—and boundaries are the focus of this exegesis—that the creation of tables to explain the value of Foucault’s work in The Order of Things, as might be done in the Classical period, is still reasonable as well as useful during the Modern period.
Even if it were accepted that the creation of these tables is legitimate in the Modern period, a sixth limitation might be whether conducting narrative research as a form of history is the preferred method for making the distinctions among psychology, education, and health required to construct the tables. That Foucault would consider historical analysis not only an appropriate method, but the preferred method for analyzing these divisions is something he specifically stated regarding history.
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.
Lastly, if all other limitations are found to not hold, the deductions that have been made concerning psychology, education, and health may be thought to have overstepped the framework that has been produced in evaluating Foucault’s The Order of Things. This represents the seventh possible limitation. If the deductions were ones that were arrived at for the first time as a result of a close reading of this work, then this would be a valid concern. However, it is not that the book presented these ideas for the first time to the author. Rather, it was in conducting narrative research on The Order of Things that the author was then conceptually able to bring together various work done over the course of a research career (Nash 2020a, 2020b, 2021a, 2021b, 2021c). The framework of Foucault developed in The Order of Things then provided a method for making the foundation of this research entirely public and potentially accessible to other researchers by creating tables that display this framework in a way that is visually and theoretically evident. The point to be made here is that, although the deductions follow logically from an assessment of the tables, there is independent support for these deductions in research published previously by the author and by others.

5. Conclusions

The intent of this analysis of Foucault’s The Order of Things, with respect to what is useful about it in relation to understanding the connections in European thought among investigations in psychology, education, and health, was to heed Foucault’s advice in how to understand this work while providing a supportive framework for other researchers conducting investigations in each of these areas, in knowing what methods are appropriate, and can provide meaningful results in this regard. It is hoped that the work that has been done here equates this researcher to both an ideal reader of The Order of Things and one of the scholars who has been able to appropriately and effectively extend the progress of Foucault’s work as he envisioned it, for understanding the relationship and limits of psychology, education, and health in European thought.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

Thank you to Mik Tampold for gifting the author a copy of The Order of Things in December 2019, providing the stimulus for this article.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Abraham, Charles, Paschal Sheeran, and Marie Johnston. 1998. From health beliefs to self-regulation: Theoretical advances in the psychology of action control. Psychology & Health 13: 569–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. American Psychiatric Association. 2013. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th ed. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Ashenden, Samantha, and David Owen. 1999. Introduction: Foucault, Habermas and the Politics of Critique. In Foucault Contra Habermas: Recasting the Dialogue between Genealogy and Critical Theory. Edited by Samantha Ashenden and David Owen. London: Sage Publications. [Google Scholar]
  4. Baroni, Raphaël. 2021. Configuration and Emplotment: Converging or Opposite Paradigms for Storytelling? Poetics Today 42: 425–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Bartsch, Lea M., Henrik Singmann, and Klaus Oberauer. 2018. The effects of refreshing and elaboration on working memory performance, and their contributions to long-term memory formation. Memory & Cognition 46: 796–808. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Berrios, German E. 1996. The History of Mental Symptoms: Descriptive Psychopathology Since the Nineteenth Century. New York: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
  7. Blair, Ann. 2000. Mosaic Physics and the Search for a Pious Natural Philosophy in the Late Renaissance. Isis 91: 32–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Boje, David M. 2006. Breaking out of Narrative’s Prison: Improper Story in Storytelling Organization. Storytelling, Self, Society 2: 28–49. Available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15505340.2006.10387472 (accessed on 8 July 2022).
  9. Brenner, Neil. 1994. Foucault’s New Functionalism. Theory and Society 23: 679–709. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Broberg, Gunner. 2020. The Broken Circle. In The Quantifying Spirit in the Eighteenth Century. Edited by Tore Frängsmyr, J. L. Heilbron and Robin E. Rider. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 45–72. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Bruner, Jerome S. 1986. Actual Minds, Possible Worlds. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. [Google Scholar]
  12. Bruner, Jerome. 1997. Culture, Mind, and Education. In The Culture of Education. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, pp. 1–43. [Google Scholar]
  13. Bunge, Mario. 1990. What kind of discipline is psychology: Autonomous or dependent, humanistic or scientific, biological or sociological? New Ideas in Psychology 8: 121–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Burrell, Gibson. 1988. Modernism, Postmodernism and Organizational Analysis 2: The Contribution of Michel Foucault. Org. Stud. 9: 221–35. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Burrell, G. 1994. Modernism, Postmodernism and Organizational Analysis 4: The Contribution of Jürgen Habermas. Organization Studies 15: 1–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Butterfield, Herbert. 1965. The Origins of Modern Science, 1300–1800. New York: The Free Press. [Google Scholar]
  17. Cao, Quoc-Thai, Quan-Hoang Vuong, Hiep-Hung Pham, Dinh-Hai Luong, Manh-Toan Ho, Anh-Duc Hoang, and Minh-Trang Do. 2021. A Bibliometric Review of Research on International Students’ Mental Health: Science Mapping of the Literature from 1957 to 2020. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education 11: 781–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Charlton, Kenneth. 2007. Education in Renaissance England. New York: Routledge, p. 15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Cockerham, William C., Alfred Rütten, and Thomas Abel. 1997. Conceptualizing Contemporary Health Lifestyles: Moving Beyond Weber. The Sociological Quarterly 38: 321–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Collins, Randall. 2000. Comparative and Historical Patterns of Education. In Handbook of the Sociology of Education. Edited by Maureen T. Hallinan. New York: Springer, pp. 213–39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Comte, Auguste. 1839. Cours de Philosophie Positive: La Partie Dogmatique de la Philosophie Sociale. Paris: Bachelier, Available online: https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=s63fCXM7Ay4C&pg=GBS.PR2&hl=en (accessed on 21 January 2022).
  22. Comte, Auguste. 1848. Discours sur L’ensemble du Positivisme. Paris: La Librairie Scientifique-Industrielle de L. Mathias. [Google Scholar]
  23. Comte, Auguste. 1865. A General View of Positivism. Translated by J. H. Bridges. London: Trübner & Co. [Google Scholar]
  24. Copernicus, Nicolaus. 1543. De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium. Nuremberg: Johannes Petreius. [Google Scholar]
  25. Curley, Edwin. 1994. Spinoza on truth. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72: 1–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Deacon, Roger. 2002. Truth, Power and Pedagogy: Michel Foucault on the rise of the disciplines. Educational Philosophy and Theory 34: 435–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Descartes, René. 1968. Discourse on Method and the Meditations. Translated by F. E. Sutcliffe. New York: Penguin Books. [Google Scholar]
  28. Descombes, Vincent. 2016. The Order of Things: An Archaeology of What? History & Theory 55: 66–81. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Dreyfus, Hubert L., Paul Rabinow, and Michel Foucault. 1982. Preface. In Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics. New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Durnová, Anna. 2018. Understanding Emotions in Policy Studies through Foucault and Deleuze. Politics and Governance 6: 95–102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Ebert, David D., Tom Van Daele, Tine Nordgreen, Maria Karekla, Angelo Compare, Cristina Zarbo, Agostino Brugnera, Svein Øverland, Glauco Trebbi, Kit L. Jensen, and et al. 2018. Internet- and Mobile-Based Psychological Interventions: Applications, Efficacy, and Potential for Improving Mental Health: A Report of the EFPA E-Health Taskforce. European Psychologist 23: 167–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Egan, Kieran. 1997. The Educated Mind: How Cognitive Tools Shape Our Understanding. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, Available online: https://books-scholarsportal-info.myaccess.library.utoronto.ca/uri/ebooks/ebooks2/ucpbooks/2012-03-30/1/9780226190402 (accessed on 8 July 2022).
  33. Emden, Carolyn. 1998. Theoretical perspectives on narrative inquiry. Collegian 5: 30–35. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Engelhardt, Eliasz. 2018. Cerebral localization of the mind and higher functions the beginnings. Dementia & Neuropsychologia 12: 321–25. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Feyerabend, Paul. 1975. Against Method, 1st ed. London: Verson Press. [Google Scholar]
  36. Flammer, August. 1981. Towards a theory of question asking. Psychological Research 43: 407–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Fornet-Betancourt, Raúl, Helmut Becker, Alfredo Gomez-Müller, and J. D. Gauthier. 1987. The Ethic of Care for the Self as a Practice of Freedom: An Interview with Michel Foucault on January 20, 1984. Philosophy & Social Criticism 12: 112–31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Foucault, Michel. 1966. Les Mots et les Choses: Une Archéologie des Sciences Humaines. Paris: Gallimard. [Google Scholar]
  39. Foucault, Michel. 1970. The Order of Things. New York: Pantheon Books, Available online: http://www.naturalthinker.net/trl/texts/Foucault,Michel/Foucault,%20Michel%20-%20The%20Order%20of%20Things%20-%20An%20Archaeology%20of%20the%20Human%20Sciences.pdf (accessed on 8 July 2022).
  40. Foucault, Michel. 1989. The Order of Things: The Archeology of Human Sciences. New York: Routledge Classics. First published 1970. [Google Scholar]
  41. Frankham, Charlotte, Thomas Richardson, and Nick Maguire. 2020. Psychological factors associated with financial hardship and mental health: A systematic review. Clinical Psychology Review 77: 101832. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Fraser, Suzanne, David Moore, Andrea Waling, and Adrian Farrugia. 2021. Making epistemic citizens: Young people and the search for reliable and credible sexual health information. Social Science & Medicine 276: 113817. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Freud, Sigmund. 1900. Die Traumdeutung. Leipzig und Wien: Franz Deuticke. [Google Scholar]
  44. Freud, Sigmund. 1913. The Interpretation of Dreams. Translated by A. A. Brill. New York: The MacMillan Company. [Google Scholar]
  45. García Ballester, Luis, Jon Arrizabalaga, Montserrat Cabré, and Lluís Cifuentes. 2002. Galen and Galenism: Theory and Medical Practice from Antiquity to the European Renaissance. Burlington: Ashgate. [Google Scholar]
  46. Gilbert, G. Nigel. 1976. The Transformation of Research Findings into Scientific Knowledge. Social Studies of Science 6: 281–306. Available online: http://www.jstor.org/stable/284685 (accessed on 8 July 2022).
  47. Greenwald, Anthony G., and Mahzarin R. Banaji. 1995. Implicit Social Cognition: Attitudes, Self-Esteem, and Stereotypes. Psychological Review 102: 4–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Hacking, Ian. 1979. Michel Foucault’s Immature Science. Noûs 13: 39–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Harris, Anne, and Leon R. de Bruin. 2018. Secondary school creativity, teacher practice and STEAM education: An international study. Journal of Educational Change 19: 153–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  50. Horlings, Annerieke, and Irma Hein. 2018. Psychiatric screening and interventions for minor refugees in Europe: An overview of approaches and tools. European Journal of Pediatrics 177: 163–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  51. Hughes, Amber. 2021. Positioning Indigenous knowledge systems within the Australian mathematics curriculum: Investigating transformative paradigms with Foucault. Discourse: Studies in the Culturural Politics of Education 42: 487–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  52. Jahoda, Maria. 1972. Foucault, Michel, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences. London: Tavistock Publications Ltd., 1970. p. 387£3.75. Social Studies of Science 2: 99–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Kasulis, Thomas P. 2018. Engaging Japanese Philosophy: A Short History. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. [Google Scholar]
  54. Kennedy, Devereaux. 1979. Michel Foucault: The Archaeology and Sociology of Knowledge. Theory and Society 8: 269–90. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Kinsman, Robert S. 2020. The Darker Vision of the Renaissance: Beyond the Fields of Reason. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Koestler, Arthur. 1986. The Sleepwalkers. London: Penguin. [Google Scholar]
  57. Kovács, József. 1998. The concept of health and disease. Medicine, Health Care and Phililosophy 1: 31–39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Kubrin, David. 1967. Newton and the Cyclical Cosmos: Providence and the Mechanical Philosophy. Journal of the History of Ideas 28: 325–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Kuhn, Thomas S. 1970. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar]
  60. Lakatos, Imre. 1970. The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes. In Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge. Edited by Imre Lakatos and Alan Musgrave. London: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
  61. Leibniz, Gottfried. 1684. Nova Methodus Pro Maximis. Acta Eruditorum, 467–88. Available online: https://www.scribd.com/document/117368276/Leibniz-Acta-Eruditorum (accessed on 16 January 2022).
  62. Leopold, David. 2018. Alienation. In The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Fall 2018th ed. Edited by E. N. Zalta. Stanford, CA, USA: Stanford University, Available online: https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2018/entries/alienation/ (accessed on 25 January 2022).
  63. Lock, Margaret, and Vinh-Kim Nguyen. 2018. An Anthropology of Biomedicine, 2nd ed. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. [Google Scholar]
  64. Luchetti, Martina, Antonio Terracciano, Yannick Stephan, Damaris Aschwanden, and Angelina R. Sutin. 2021. Personality Traits and Memory: A Multilevel Analysis Across 27 Countries From the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe. Psychological Science 32: 1047–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  65. Ludwig, Walther. 2005. Astrology in Antiquity, in the Renaissance, and Today. Arts: Journal of the Sydney University Arts Association 27: 432. Available online: https://openjournals.library.usyd.edu.au/index.php/ART/issue/view/432 (accessed on 17 January 2022).
  66. Mader, Mary Beth. 2016. SIX/Foucault, Cuvier, and the Science of Life. In Biopower: Foucault and Beyond. Edited by V. W. Cisney and N. Morar. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, Available online: https://philpapers.org/rec/MADSF-2 (accessed on 8 July 2022).
  67. Martin, Luther H. 1995. The discourse of (Michel Foucault’s) life: A review essay. Method & Theory in the Study of Religion 7: 57–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  68. Marx, Karl. 1867. Das Kapital: Kritick der Politischen Oekonomie. Buch 1: Der Produktionsprocess des Kapitals. Hamburg: Verlag von Otto Meissner. [Google Scholar]
  69. Marx, Karl. 1887. Capital: A Critical Analysis of Capitalist Production. Edited by Frederick Engels. Translated by Samuel Moore, and Edward Aveling. London: Swan Sonnenschein, Lowrey & Co. [Google Scholar]
  70. McGushin, Edward. 2005. Foucault and the problem of the subject. Philosophy and Social Criticism 31: 623–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  71. Miller, James. 1993. The Passion of Michel Foucault. New York: Simon & Schuster. [Google Scholar]
  72. Modell, Arnold H. 2011. Not Even Wrong. Psychoanalytic Inquiry 31: 126–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  73. Moen, Torill. 2006. Reflections on the Narrative Research Approach. International Journal of Qualitative Methods 5: 56–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  74. Moore, John Hartwell. 1971. The Order of Things, An Archaeology of the Human Sciences. Science Society 35: 490–94. Available online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/40401605 (accessed on 8 January 2022).
  75. Nash, Carol. 2020a. Challenges Identifying and Stimulating Self-Directed Learning in Publicly Funded Programs. In The Digital Era of Education: Novel Teaching Strategies and Learning Approaches Designed for Modern Students. New York: Nova Science Publishers, pp. 259–300. [Google Scholar]
  76. Nash, Carol. 2020b. Reconsidering Privilege: How to Structure Writing Prompts to Develop Narrative. Survive & Thrive: A Journal for Medical Humanities and Narrative as Medicine 5: 3. Available online: https://repository.stcloudstate.edu/survive_thrive/vol5/iss2/3 (accessed on 8 July 2022).
  77. Nash, Carol. 2021a. Challenges to Learners in Interpreting Self as Other, Post COVID-19. Challenges 12: 31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  78. Nash, Carol. 2021b. Disorder in ADHD and ASD Post-COVID-19. COVID 1: 153–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  79. Nash, Carol. 2021c. Medical Professionals Require Curricula Support to Overcome Their Reluctance to Embrace Self-Directed Learning in Response to COVID-19. Medical Sciences Forum 4: 20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  80. Newton, Isaac S. 1687. Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica. London: S. Pepys, Reg. Soc. Præses, Available online: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/28233/28233-h/28233-h.htm (accessed on 16 January 2022).
  81. O’Higgins, Aoife, Eleanor Marie Ott, and Michael William Shea. 2018. What is the Impact of Placement Type on Educational and Health Outcomes of Unaccompanied Refugee Minors? A Systematic Review of the Evidence. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review 21: 354–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  82. Overcash, Janine A. 2003. Narrative research: A review of methodology and relevance to clinical practice. Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology 48: 179–84. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  83. Petrides, Konstantinos V., Maria-Jose Sanchez-Ruiz, Alex B. Siegling, Donald H. Saklofske, and Stella Mavroveli. 2018. Emotional Intelligence as Personality: Measurement and Role of Trait Emotional Intelligence in Educational Contexts. In Emotional Intelligence in Education. The Springer Series on Human Exceptionality; Edited by K. Keefer, J. Parker and D. Saklofske. Cham: Springer, pp. 49–81. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  84. Polanyi, Michael. 1966. The Logic of Tacit Inference. Philosophy 41: 1–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  85. Popkewitz, Thomas S. 2011. Curriculum history, schooling and the history of the present. History of Education 40: 1–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  86. Popper, Karl. 1959. The Logic of Scientific Discovery. London: Hutchinson Press. [Google Scholar]
  87. Rajan, Tilottama. 1998. The Phenomenological Allegory: From “Death and the Labyrinth” to “The Order of Things”. Poetics Today 19: 439–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  88. Rorke, Margaret Ann. 2001. Music Therapy in the Age of Enlightenment. Journal of Music Therapy 38: 66–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  89. Rose, David. 2018. Languages of Schooling: Embedding literacy learning with genre-based pedagogy. European Journal of Applied Linguistics 6: 59–89. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  90. Rosenberg, Daniel. 1999. An Eighteenth-Century Time Machine: The “Encyclopedia” of Denis Diderot. Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques 25: 227–50. Available online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/41299144 (accessed on 27 January 2022).
  91. Salkind, Neil J. 2010. Narrative Research. In Encyclopedia of Research Design. Edited by N. J. Salkind. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications, vol. 1, pp. 870–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  92. Savigneau, Josyane. 1999. Ecrivains et Choix Sentimentaux. Le Monde 15 Octobre 1999. Available online: https://www.lemonde.fr/archives/article/1999/10/15/ecrivains-et-choix-sentimentaux_3570170_1819218.html (accessed on 6 January 2022).
  93. Schacter, Daniel, Daniel Gilbert, Daniel Wegner, and Bruce M. Hood. 2012. Psychology: European Edition. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. [Google Scholar]
  94. Schurgin, Mark W., and Jonathan I. Flombaum. 2018. Visual working memory is more tolerant than visual long-term memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 44: 1216–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  95. Schuwirth, Lambert W., and Cees P. Van Der Vleuten. 2004. Different written assessment methods: What can be said about their strengths and weaknesses? Medical Education 38: 974–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  96. Sciortino, Luca. 2021. The emergence of objectivity: Fleck, Foucault, Kuhn and Hacking. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 88: 128–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  97. St. Pierre, Elizabeth Adams. 2021. The Lure of the New and the Hold of the Dogmatic. Qualitative Inquiry 27: 480–90. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  98. Steiner, Martina, Mariëtte H. van Loon, Natalie S. Bayard, and Claudia M. Roebers. 2020. Development of Children’s monitoring and control when learning from texts: Effects of age and test format. Metacognition and Learning 15: 3–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  99. Sternberg, Robert J. 2018. Theories of intelligence. In APA Handbook of Giftedness and Talent. Edited by S. I. Pfeiffer, E. Shaunessy-Dedrick and M. Foley-Nicpon. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, pp. 145–61. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  100. Sukys, Saulius, Laima Trinkuniene, and Ilona Tilindiene. 2019. Subjective Health Literacy among School-Aged Children: First Evidence from Lithuania. Internaltional Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16: 3397. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  101. Thorndike, Edward L. 1910. The contribution of psychology to education. Journal of Educational Psychology 1: 5–12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  102. Vogeley, Kai, and Shaun Gallagher. 2011. Self in the Brain. In Oxford Handbooks Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  103. Wertz, Frederick J., Kathy Charmaz, Linda M. McMullen, Ruthellen Josselson, Rosemarie Anderson, and Emalinda McSpadden. 2011. Five Ways of Doing Qualitative Analysis: Phenomenological Psychology, Grounded Theory, Discourse Analysis, Narrative Research, and Intuitive Inquiry. New York: Guilford Press. [Google Scholar]
  104. Wittink, Harriët, and Janke Oosterhaven. 2018. Patient education and health literacy. Musculoskeletal Science and Practice 38: 120–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  105. Wright, Jenny. 2022. Drawing and Memory Loss. Tracey: Drawing and Visualisation Research 16: 1–13. Available online: https://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/TRACEY/article/view/2867 (accessed on 9 June 2022).
  106. Wright, Elina, and Ruksana Osman. 2018. What is critical for transforming higher education? The transformative potential of pedagogical framework of phenomenography and variation theory of learning for higher education. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment 28: 257–70. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  107. Zürcher, Carmen, Hannah Tough, Christine Fekete, and SwiSCI Study Group. 2019. Mental health in individuals with spinal cord injury: The role of socioeconomic conditions and social relationships. PLoS ONE 14: e0206069. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
Table 1. Three fundamental aspects of order—language, value, and being—ascertained from Foucault’s The Order of Things as they relate to the three most recent periods of European thought with respect to the ordering of things.
Table 1. Three fundamental aspects of order—language, value, and being—ascertained from Foucault’s The Order of Things as they relate to the three most recent periods of European thought with respect to the ordering of things.
Fundamental Aspects of Order
Period of European ThoughtLanguageValueBeing
RenaissanceRecognition of signaturesResemblance to God’s perfectionStructure dependent on signs
ClassicalConnection to original criesAccumulation of wealthStructure dependent on “I”
ModernConjugation of verbsProduction by laborStructure dependent on organic function
Table 2. Three aspects of order (psychology, education, and health) based on Foucault’s The Order of Things—with respect to language, value, and being—in relation to the three most recent periods of European thought with regards to ordering, comparable in all three periods (recognizing that the term “psychology” originated in the Modern period).
Table 2. Three aspects of order (psychology, education, and health) based on Foucault’s The Order of Things—with respect to language, value, and being—in relation to the three most recent periods of European thought with regards to ordering, comparable in all three periods (recognizing that the term “psychology” originated in the Modern period).
Three Aspects of Order
Period of European ThoughtPsychologyEducationHealth
RenaissanceThought in accordance with signaturesRecitation of resemblancesAn acceptance of signs
ClassicalThought in accordance with distinctionsIncremental addition of factsAdhering to the norm
ModernThought in accordance with otherKnowledge through subjectsOptimal organic function
Table 3. The psychological eras into which the Modern period of European thought can be divided according to Foucault’s The Order of Things.
Table 3. The psychological eras into which the Modern period of European thought can be divided according to Foucault’s The Order of Things.
Modern Period EraModel of Psychological Reasoning
19th centurybiological
Cusp, 19th/20th centuryeconomic
20th centurylinguistic
Table 4. The forms of question-asking to provide knowledge that can be analyzed from Foucault’s The Order of Things—with respect to language, value, and being—in association with the three most recent periods of European thought.
Table 4. The forms of question-asking to provide knowledge that can be analyzed from Foucault’s The Order of Things—with respect to language, value, and being—in association with the three most recent periods of European thought.
Period of European ThoughtForm of Question-Asking to Provide Knowledge
RenaissanceResponses indicated and dictated by signs
ClassicalThose eliciting “true” and “false” answers
ModernAsking when, where, who, what, how, why
Table 5. The form of scientific question-asking responses analyzable from Foucault’s The Order of Things regarding the modern period of European thought.
Table 5. The form of scientific question-asking responses analyzable from Foucault’s The Order of Things regarding the modern period of European thought.
Type of Question AskedResponse in Modern Period
when19th century → now
whereOriginating in France, Germany, and Austria
whoAugust Comte, Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud
whatPhilology, Economics, Biology
howDeveloping thought through a hierarchy of subjects
whyCreation of “man” as the focus of order
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

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

AMA Style

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 Style

Nash, 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 Style

Nash, 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

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop