Browsing by Author "Haye M., Andrés"
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- ItemAutonomy and the ambiguity of biological rationalities: systems theory, ADHD and Kant(2018) Haye M., Andrés; Matus, Claudia; Cottet, Pablo; Nino, Sebastian
- ItemBergson, Peirce y Vygotski: Imaginación y la producción del mundo a finales del siglo XI y principios del XX(2019) Haye M., Andrés; Hevia Jordán, Evelyn; Reiter Barros, Francisco; Salas, Gonzalo
- ItemContinuing commentary: Beyond recollection: Toward a dialogical psychology of collective memory(2012) Haye M., AndrésCollective memory implies the social and psychological production of meaningful acts of memory, a special kind of truth claim about a controversial past. Memory acts are thus conceptualized as ideological positioning movements toward others, which is impossible to account for from individual cognition. What kind of psychological processes, if any, would be involved in collective memory? A three-fold model is sketched to account for a whole act of memory. One analytical component is the generation of a knowledge structure about the past object. A second component is the construction of an attitude toward the theme. The third is the understanding of the ideological dimension within which the knowledge structure and the attitude under production are contextualized. An information storage-and-retrieval mechanism is not needed in this theoretical account. It is suggested that psychology of memory may contribute to accounting for these three micro-genetic levels as integrated into meaningful memory acts.
- ItemDe la subjetividad del objeto a la subjetivación de la investigación: prácticas de investigación social en Chile(2013) Arensburg Castelli, Svenska; Haye M., Andrés; Jeanneret Brith, Francisco; Sandoval Moya, Juan; Reyes Andreani, María José
- ItemThe discursive nature of inner speech(2012) Larraín, Antonia; Haye M., AndrésIf inner speech is first of all speech, then a critical departure point is to study its discursive nature. The aim of this paper is to deepen the notion of inner speech from a discursive and dialogical perspective. Drawing on the works of Vygotsky, Bakhtin, and Vološinov, we discuss the idea that consciousness is structured by language, exploring the concept of internalization, and making an analogy between acts of thinking and uttering. Inner discourse is understood as a dialogical movement of interchange between different ideological positions. Furthermore, we propose a distinction between inner discourse and self-talk: inner discourse is a basal dialogical process that may give form to syntactically well-organized self-talk, but also to processes that are on the border of language because of a weak or very instable syntactic organization. Consequently, inner discourse should be conceived of not as a homogeneous and unitary process but as a heterogeneous class of discursive practices