Theory Construction in Social Personality Psychology
Personal Experiences and Lessons Learned: A Special Issue of personality and Social Psychology Review
- Edited by Arie W. Kruglanski, E. Tory Higgins
- Price: $35.00
- Binding: Paperback
- Pages: 128
- Published by: Psychology Press
- Publication Date: 10th June 2004
- ISBN: 978-0-8058-9548-3
About the Book
This special issue features papers that offer deeply felt, valuable perspectives on diverse aspects of theory construction in social-personality psychology. The goal is to furnish a basis for starting a discussion about the considerable challenges of theorizing, the ways of meeting those challenges, and the great rewards that successful theorizing offers to the discipline as a whole.
Table of Contents
Volume 8, Number 2, 2004. Contents: A.W. Kruglanski, E.T. Higgins, Preface to the Special Issue.
D. Abrams, M.A. Hogg, Metatheory: Lessons From Social Identity Research.
M.B. Brewer, Taking the Social Origins of Human Nature Seriously: Toward a More Imperialist Social Psychology.
J.T. Cacioppo, Common Sense, Intuition, and Theory in Personality and Social Psychology.
K. Fiedler, Tools, Toys, Truisms, and Theories: Some Thoughts on the Creative Cycle of Theory Formation.
S.T. Fiske, Mind the Gap: In Praise of Informal Sources of Formal Theory.
E.T. Higgins, Making a Theory Useful: Lessons Handed Down.
J.G. Holmes, The Benefits of Abstract Functional Analysis in Theory Construction: The Case of Interdependence Theory.
A.W. Kruglanski, The Quest for the Gist: On Challenges of Going Abstract in Social and Personality Psychology.
J.M. Levine, R.L. Moreland, Collaboration: The Social Context of Theory Development.
W.J. McGuire, A Perspectivist Approach to Theory Construction.
A. Nowak, Dynamical Minimalism: Why Less Is More in Psychology.
Y. Trope, Theory in Social Psychology: Seeing the Forest and the Trees.
R.S. Wyer, Jr., A Personalized Theory of Theory Construction.
M.P. Zanna, The Naïve Epistemology of a Working Social Psychologist (or the Working Epistemology of a Naïve Social Psychologist): The Value of Taking "Temporary Givens" Seriously.