Literature DB >> 25238674

Imagine the Feeling: An Aesthetic Science of Psychology.

Fernando Quigua1, Joshua W Clegg.   

Abstract

We claim that static trait models have dominated contemporary personality psychology but fail to reflect adequately the persons they depict. Beginning from, but moving well beyond, this critique of the five factor model (and the personality psychology field over which it reigns), we shine an aesthetic and critical light on psychology's wider failings. We review the linguistic and methodological features that have undermined the discipline's faithful understandings of human beings and their experience. In its place, we champion an aesthetic (as opposed to an an-esthetic) science of the person, one that is responsive in spirit and in practice to the emotional and imaginative life of participants and to the contexts in which they move. Specifically, we suggest that the images of fantasy and of ordinary metaphor may afford poetic understandings of participant experience that surpass those produced by literal, discursive description. We also hold that these images may offer us the most sensitive and faithful expressions of how social and environmental contexts-and so-called structural and discursive realities-are felt. The paper concludes by sketching several methodological trajectories that may stimulate researcher imagination and empathy, making research more faithful to participants and the reaches of their experience. Research practices informed by feeling and image in this way may generate new knowledge as well as new obligations.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25238674     DOI: 10.1007/s12124-014-9284-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci        ISSN: 1932-4502


  6 in total

1.  Uncertainty as a fundamental scientific value.

Authors:  Joshua W Clegg
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2010-09

2.  Minding feeling.

Authors:  Robert E Innis
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2010-05-20

3.  Toward poetic science.

Authors:  Mark Freeman
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2011-12

4.  Writing social psychology: fictional things and unpopulated texts.

Authors:  Michael Billig
Journal:  Br J Soc Psychol       Date:  2011-03

5.  Personality psychology: lexical approaches, assessment methods, and trait concepts reveal only half of the story--why it is time for a paradigm shift.

Authors:  Jana Uher
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2013-03

6.  Personality as continuous stochastic process: what Western personality theory can learn from classical confucianism.

Authors:  Peter J Giordano
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2014-06
  6 in total

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