The purpose of this article is to introduce Manuel DeLanda's "assemblage theory" to psychology. Based on a select review of this theory, we argue that DeLanda's work may allow for new ways of approaching unresolved problems in psychological inquiry, such as the realism-constructivism impasse, and disputes regarding linear and non-linear models of causality. DeLanda's systematic treatment of the assemblage, using terms familiar to social scientists and analytic philosophers alike, offers a host of novel concepts and methods for the analysis of social, biological, and/or political systems, while also indicating how this analysis may be deployed in innovative social science inquiry. A number of psychologists have recently begun to explore the concept of assemblage. We add to these efforts in the present paper by assessing how DeLanda's assemblage theory may open up a new "image of the psychological" to guide research and practice.
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