Dialectical Metatheory in Family Therapy
- 1 March 1984
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Family Process
- Vol. 23 (1), 49-61
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.1984.00049.x
Abstract
This paper addresses the controversy in family therapy over basic philosophical issues in terms of a historical opposition between demonstrative and dialectical metatheories. It argues that advances in family therapy are indicative of the growing prominence of dialectical forms of understanding in the social sciences. Several family therapy concepts are explored as representative of the dialectical categories of motion, form, relationship, and transformation.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Circular QuestioningFamily Process, 1982
- What Is an Epistemology of Family Therapy?Family Process, 1982
- On the Problems of Eclecticism: A Call for Epistemologic Clarification and Human‐Scale TheoriesFamily Process, 1982
- Beyond Homeostasis: Toward a Concept of CoherenceFamily Process, 1982
- Ecosystemic Epistemology: Critical Implications for the Aesthetics and Pragmatics of Family TherapyFamily Process, 1982
- The Theory of RelativityHuman Development, 1981
- Cognitive-Behaviorism as a Dialectic Contradiction The Unity of OppositesHuman Development, 1978
- Toward a Dialectical Approach to InterventionHuman Development, 1977
- The Trait-Situation Controversy and the Concept of InteractionPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1977
- Dialectic Operations: The Final Period of Cognitive DevelopmentHuman Development, 1973