•  471
    Worldviews
    In Kenneth D. Keith (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
    The term worldview – which is a loan translation from the German Weltanschauung or Weltsicht – refers to an elaborate cognitive framework or belief and orientation system that provides societies and individuals with a means of understanding their environment and ordering their lives in accordance with various key assumptions that are usually widely shared by the members of their ingroups.
  •  185
    Welt- und Menschenbilder: eine sozialwissenschaftliche Annäherung
    Aus Politik Und Zeitgeschichte 65 (41-42): 3-9. 2015.
  • Is the individual an enlightened westerner?
    In Al Dueck & Louise Sundararajan (eds.), Values and Indigenous Psychology in the Age of the Machine and Market, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 131-156. 2024.
    At least since the European Enlightenment, Western sociological and psychological theories of development have been shaped by the view that the social transformation of ancient and other traditional societies is closely related to the increased importance given to the concept of the individual and individuality. This process of individualization is frequently described as a concomitant of the “disenchantment” of the world, often referred to as secularization. Consequently, most of these theories…Read more
  •  293
    Destruktion und Perfektion: Zum Wechselspiel von Vernichtung und Vervollkommnung im Hinduismus
    Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 30 (1): 235-248. 2021.
    An almost mythological narrative of the Occident states that with the European Enlightenment, humans began to no longer leave their fate to higher authorities, but to take it into their own hands with courageous confidence in their own powers. Apart from the fact that this topos of the self-determined human being characterizes the mythologies and heroic epics of numerous cultures, including non-European ones, the modern European narrative at least seems to tie its ideal of self-development as we…Read more
  •  33
    Psychologie und Kultur
    Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie 2011 (2): 51-66. 2011.
    Taking psychology and its attempt to deal scientifically with the meaning of culture as an example, this article outlines the meaning of various historiographic narratives of disciplinary self-perception with regard to tensions between the natural and cultural sciences. The thesis postulates that these self-images are of psychological, especially cultural-psychological, importance. Only a psychology that includes aspects of the cultural sciences is able to deal with this vital aspect of the broa…Read more
  •  74
    A Cultural Psychological View on Human Culture and Cultural Development
    Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 1 (1): 43-46. 2017.