To believe or not to believe in verbal reports: The denial of first-person authority and the blind spot of universalist cross-cultural studies

Cornejo, C.

Abstract

In his paper, David Matsumoto (2005) offers a critical approach to the adequacy of verbal reports as representations of culture, arguing that they represent a cultural ideology (what he calls 'consensual culture' or a 'consensual cultural worldview') rather than a culture's actual complexity ('cultural ways' or 'actual cultural behaviors'). I agree with the author that we make mistakes when describing our own culture. But the fact that we may sometimes err does not necessarily mean that we always do. The problem with such a view is that the denial of the epistemic value of verbal reports also invalidates the capacities of the scientist as a member of the culture, unless we consider the scientist to exist outside her/his culture. This is the classical objectivist approach in science and, furthermore, the assumption tacitly accepted by cross-cultural studies. Copyright © 2006 SAGE Publications.

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Título según WOS: To believe or not to believe in verbal reports: The denial of first-person authority and the blind spot of universalist cross-cultural studies
Título según SCOPUS: To believe or not to believe in verbal reports: The denial of first-person authority and the blind spot of universalist cross-cultural studies
Título de la Revista: CULTURE PSYCHOLOGY
Volumen: 12
Número: 1
Editorial: SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2006
Página de inicio: 63
Página final: 67
Idioma: English
URL: http://cap.sagepub.com/cgi/doi/10.1177/1354067X06061593
DOI:

10.1177/1354067X06061593

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS