Psychological Concept of the Scientific Rationality Types Part 1. Ideal Objects and the Types of Rationality
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21146/0042-8744-2022-10-121-131Keywords:
epistemology, scientific rationality, scientific knowledge, theory of self-determination, realism, constructivism, ideal objectAbstract
The article presents a psychological concept of the scientific rationality types, which is based on the constructivist version of the Self-Determination Theory. In part 1, the author shows that the scientific rationality type of a particular
theory is determined by the content features of used ideal objects. Depending on the contribution of two components – elements of sensory experience and “free fiction” of the researcher – it is proposed to distinguish eight types of rationality. The conditionally objective type assumes that scientific knowledge is mathematized and is constructed using ideal objects that do not have a scientific sense. Within the framework of three externalized types of rationality, ideal objects created in three different ways have both a scientific sense and perceptual counterparts. The three internalized types of scientific rationality are associated with ideal objects also constructed in different ways that have a scientific sense, but do not have perceptual counterparts. All of these variants assume that ideal objects describe the reality being studied. In contrast to them, the eighth, constructivist type of scientific rationality involves the use of ideal objects that are fundamentally unrelated to external reality.
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- 2025-02-07 (2)
- 2022-10-31 (1)