The Arrow of Time and the Cycle of Time: Concepts of Change, Cognition, and Embodiment
- 1 July 1994
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Psychological Inquiry
- Vol. 5 (3) , 215-237
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327965pli0503_9
Abstract
In this target article, I explore the thesis that both the natural and human sciences are undergoing—however gradually and reluctantly—a deep and broad paradigm shift. This shift is away from foundational, objectivist, atomist, nondirectional mechanistic category systems and toward interpretational, holistic, relational-dialectical, directional organic category systems. The contextual influence of each of these category systems on understandings of change (development), cognition, and personality is examined both historically and from a contemporary perspective across a wide band of scientific disciplines. The Arrow of Time is a deep metaphor entailing a relational field of both nonclosed cycles (spirals) and direction. The Arrow of Time metaphor emerges from the organic narrative. Within the context of this metaphor, and the broader organic metaphor that forms the wider conceptual context, development is understood as entailing both direction and variation. Within the organic metaphor, cognition and pers...Keywords
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