Samelson F
Kansas State University, Manhattan KS 66506, USA.
J Hist Behav Sci. 2000 Autumn;36(4):499-506. doi: 10.1002/1520-6696(200023)36:4<499::aid-jhbs14>3.0.co;2-j.
In successive editions of the Handbook of Social Psychology (Lindzey, 1954), the focus of the history of the field shifted from the substantive ideas of nineteenth-century thinkers to the successful emergence of a psychological experimental social psychology in the twentieth. Countering this whiggish account, the dominant themes in the present issue involve attempts to portray two parallel paradigm shifts: from a "social" to an "asocial" social psychology, and from a broad-ranging theoretical-philosophical subject to a narrow experimental (psychological) science-changes initiated by Floyd Allport. But such a formulation may be called into question as another version of retrospective history-with inverted, anti-Whig valuations.