To most readers of Mind, Culture, and Activity, the thesis of Sanford Goldberg's Anti-Individualism will seem familiar and uncontroversial. He defends the view that the content of language and the mind, the nature of knowledge, and the justification of belief depend not merely upon the properties of an isolated, individual speaker, thinker, or knower but also essentially on the physical and social environment or context in which they are embedded.
Matthew J. Brown hasn't uploaded this book review.
Let Matthew J. know you want this book review to be uploaded.