慶應義塾大学学術情報リポジトリ(KOARA)KeiO Associated Repository of Academic resources

慶應義塾大学学術情報リポジトリ(KOARA)

Home  »»  Listing item  »»  Detail

Detail

Item Type Article
ID
AN00150430-00000055-0143  
Preview
Image
thumbnail  
Caption  
Full text
AN00150430-00000055-0143.pdf
Type :application/pdf Download
Size :3.6 MB
Last updated :Aug 19, 2010
Downloads : 688

Total downloads since Aug 19, 2010 : 688
 
Release Date
 
Title
Title <<円卓心理学>>の提唱 : <記憶>を巡っての予備的考察  
Kana エンタク シンリガク ノ テイショウ : キオク オ メグッテ ノ ヨビテキ コウサツ  
Romanization Entaku shinrigaku no teisho : kioku o megutte no yobiteki kosatsu  
Other Title
Title Toward round-table psychology  
Kana  
Romanization  
Creator
Name 佐藤, 方哉  
Kana サトウ, マサヤ  
Romanization Sato, Masaya  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大学文学部  
Affiliation (Translated)  
Role  
Link  

Name 神尾, 昭雄  
Kana カミノ, アキオ  
Romanization Kamio, Akio  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大学文学部  
Affiliation (Translated)  
Role  
Link  

Name 小野, 尚志  
Kana オノ, タカシ  
Romanization Ono, Takashi  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大学文学部  
Affiliation (Translated)  
Role  
Link  
Edition
 
Place
東京  
Publisher
Name 三田哲學會  
Kana ミタ テツガクカイ  
Romanization Mita tetsugakukai  
Date
Issued (from:yyyy) 1970  
Issued (to:yyyy)  
Created (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Updated (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Captured (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Physical description
 
Source Title
Name 哲學  
Name (Translated)  
Volume  
Issue 55  
Year 1970  
Month 3  
Start page 143  
End page 212  
ISSN
05632099  
ISBN
 
DOI
URI
JaLCDOI
NII Article ID
 
Ichushi ID
 
Other ID
 
Doctoral dissertation
Dissertation Number  
Date of granted  
Degree name  
Degree grantor  
Abstract
Experimental psychology seems to have been firmly established as a natural science with various experimental devices, mathematical formulae and many other tools. However, we cannot overlook one of the important features of the present-day academic psychology that it seems to be going more and more away from what it was originally intended to be, that is, the investigation into the nature of human mind. In fact, it may be said that experimental psychology does not give satisfactory answers to questions such as those often raised by a layman that are directly concerned with actual functioning his mind. Of course, it would be patently false to argue that psychology has done nothing to meet such a challenge. We have, for example, Freudian psychoanalytic theory. Evidently it has contributed immensely to our understanding of the human mind. A great number of individual experimental studies accumulated in the past fifty years have also done much to advance our knowledge. These contributions notwithstanding, there is a serious lack of a conceptual framework within which results of individual researches can be related to each other properly, or notional and often vague concepts of speculative psychology like psychoanalytic theories are formally described. We have to admit that years of experimental studies in psychology has not resulted in such a framework rich enough in its empirical content to meet reasonable demands on it and to indicate the line of future research. In this paper we have attempted to make a first step toward the construction of such a framework for the problem of memory, which, no doubt constitutes a really fundamental component of psychology. We have first directed our attention to part of the semantics of a group of words in Japanese whose meaning essentially involve the concept of memory. Our analysis makes use of the methods of both. British ordinary language philosophy and the recent theory of generative grammar. Then, we have tried to interpret what the linguistic data seem to suggest in terms of the facts already uncovered through experimental work and the concepts of learning theories. Though it would be far beyond the scope of the present paper to continue this attempt further along this line, we hope that in the course of it a framework will emerge which can incorporate various experimental data on memory and give us a clue to future investigations into its underlying mechanism. Our attempt, then, is in accordance with a methodology that allows not only experimental data but also various ' indirect ' data,, such as those reflected in the conceptual system lying behind our language, to be taken into account. In addition, many intuitive and speculative ideas are fairly freely considered. We believe this does not make our study particularly subjective or non-objective. Various kinds of data are constantly checked against each other and an idea suggested by one of us is examined in so far as it is agreed to by other and is supported by other kinds of more ' objective ' data. This methodology requires much discussion and, to achieve mutual agreement, the members who joined a study by this methodology must have some common background. It can only be applied when they have opportunities to have a great deal of discussion in which speculations and intuitive judgements must be exchanged. Thus a science of human mind by this methodology may be called a round-table psycholygy, as the tile of this paper represents.
 
Table of contents

 
Keyword
 
NDC
 
Note

 
Language
日本語  
Type of resource
text  
Genre
Journal Article  
Text version
publisher  
Related DOI
Access conditions

 
Last modified date
Aug 20, 2010 09:17:20  
Creation date
Aug 19, 2010 09:00:00  
Registerd by
mediacenter
 
History
Aug 19, 2010    タイトル, フリーキーワード, タイトル タイトル を変更
Aug 19, 2010    インデックス を変更
Aug 20, 2010    インデックス を変更
 
Index
/ Public / Faculty of Letters / Philosophy / 55 (197003)
 
Related to