Why Materialist Psychology
Materialist psychology starts from the claim that mind is socially produced, historically transformed, and biologically embodied rather than an isolated inner substance. This archive uses that orientation to connect classic debates, empirical traditions, and contemporary synthesis work.
Interpretive SynthesisCore claims
- Psychological functions emerge in activity and social relations before becoming stabilized as individual capacities.
- Biology matters, but physiology is treated as a condition of possibility, not the whole explanation of meaning, desire, or agency.
- Theory must be historical: categories like emotion, self, and intelligence change with institutions, labor forms, and education systems.
Historical evidence base
The archive foregrounds lineages that worked across philosophy, physiology, and social theory: Sechenov and Pavlov on reflex systems, Vygotsky and Leontiev on mediated activity, and Bourdieu on habitus and social reproduction.
Rather than presenting one canonical school, these dossiers show converging attempts to explain how social structure becomes lived psychology.
How this project is organized
Site sections are arranged as working research infrastructure: dossiers in Thinkers, periodization in Timeline, methodological tensions in Debates, and contemporary model-building in Affective Socialization Theory (AST).