Cultural Variation in Cognitive Processes From a Sociohistorical Psychological Perspective

Journal of Mind and Behavior 12 (2):281-296 (1991)
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Abstract

Two strands of the Vygotskian sociohistorical school of psychology are compared to better understand the nature of cultural variation in cognitive processes. The "relativist" strand maintains that cognitive processes are culturally variable. The "universalist" strand maintains that these processes manifest essential cultural uniformity despite apparent differences in performance. A review of the evidence concludes that the relativist position is more tenable

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