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Abstract
‘War, in fact, can be seen as a process of achieving equilibrium among unequal technologies’ (McLuhan, 1964)
We are at war. As Western science and its accompanying technology expands the frontiers of knowledge at an ever-increasing rate, ‘indigenous’ perspectives of knowledge are exiled into the borderlands of special interest groups and localized research programmes. Mainstream scientific thought lays claim to objective interpretations of experience at the expense of alternative realities offered by emerging theories of knowledge. Furthermore, as localized worldviews (i.e., those derived from ancestral knowledge bases and pre-industrial or non-scientific premises) challenge existing paradigms, the inevitable interactions threaten to undermine the fidelity of this knowledge. One such arena where this ideological conflict is apparent is the growing field of Maori psychology.
Type
Conference Contribution
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Tamatea, A. J. (2008). Ideology is theft: Thoughts on the legitimacy of a Maori psychology. In Levy, M., Nikora, L.W., Masters-Awatere, B., Rua, M. & Waitoki, W. (Eds). Claiming Spaces: Proceedings of the 2007 National Maori and Pacific Psychologies Symposium 23rd-24th November 2007 (pp. 123-126). Hamilton, New Zealand: Māori and Psychology Research Unit, University of Waikato.
Date
2008
Publisher
Maori and Psychology Research Unit, University of Waikato
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
Copyright © Maori and Psychology Research Unit, University of Waikato 2008
Each contributor has permitted the Maori and Psychology Research Unit to publish their work in this collection. No part of the material protected in this copyright notice may be reproduced or utilised in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the contributor concerned.