Russian AT is often supposed to be confined to a set of methods for the analysis of interaction of an individual with his environment. But it is a theoretical and methodological approach, rooted in the history of psychology and well-developed at the level of philosophical methodology (Mironenko, 2008, 2013).
One of the key figures of Russian AT, Sergey L. Rubinstein wrote:
At the heart of every significant philosophical conception, as the origin of its creation, there can be found some basic tendency, some integrative moment of truth, some basic motive and interest of thought" (Rubinstein, 1997, p. 138).
The lack of understanding of this creative motive leads to misinterpretation and misunderstanding. So, what was this
Russian AT was born in 1920-s in post-revolutionary Russia, where a great experiment, aimed to test Marxist theory in practice, was carried out. At that time Russia saw a wonderful splash of creative activity in culture and science. It was the time of Blok, Kandinsky Malevich, Mayakovsky Meyerhold, etc. The rise of psychology was caused by a huge demand of practical work and the need for a new scientific methodology based on Marxism. Many scientists such as Bekhterev, Vygotsky and Luria sincerely believed that Russia was standing at the edge of social and cultural rebirth, and tried to take an active part in the creating of a new life. Great expectations of the Soviet government were laid on psychological practice. Two great unrealizable tasks were put forward, both concerning ideology as well as economical life of the country: to increase
This situation accounted for the radical and even arrogant nature of the new Marxist psychology. In contrast to static concepts and implicit theories of immutable human nature, domineering in Western psychology, Russian AT, driven by the idea of managing human evolution in order to prove the "bolshevik understanding" of Marxist theory that dominated Soviet discourses after 1920s, focused on the understanding of human as an infinitely changing creature. Culture in humans was considered as first of all the ability to change under the influence of social surroundings, the speed and extent of changes making humans unique among other animals. This entailed a primary focus of ruptures and discontinuities in evolution, first of all, on the principle difference between human and animal (Mironenko, 2009b; 2010). The unity of nature and culture in humans was considered as not only based on affinities, but also on contradictions, and investigations mainly focused on these contradictions, as they were supposed to account for the dialectics of change and development, both cultural and biological.
As repeatedly has been noted in the literature (Castro and Lafuente, 2007; Marsella 2012, Moghaddam 1987, Rose 2008), the 20th с Western psychology developed based on assessments of personality of a human belonging to contemporary Western culture and practices of culturing traits, sought after in Western culture. These psychological characteristics acquired the status of universality in mainstream psychology. Due to the stereotype of taking a western citizen for a human in general, mainstream psychology is dominated by an implicit tendency to blurring boundaries between human culture and human nature and perceiving both as basically static. Culture is regarded here as a kind of superstructure on the foundation of biology, and the unity of nature and culture in humans is considered as somewhat indivisible and forever given and specified.