Are ontological meanings somehow sacrosanct in arguments concerning psychology –
particularly those scored by discursive accounts of human being? Or is the purposeful
deferment of ontological concerns in discursive psychology (DP) another instance of
method-fetishism (Koch, 1981)? Shotter’s (1995) understanding of joint action and
Chouliaraki’s (2002) critical realist account of social action combine to support an
alternate position to the predominant discursive psychological approach informed by
epistemological constructionism (DPEC). The DPEC position is here contrasted with a
discursive psychological approach informed by ontological constructionism (DPOC).
Via this distinction, a path for future discursive psychological studies is charted, one
which values understanding the kinds of practical-moral knowledges (Shotter, 1993)
available to people in accounting for themselves and their actions as psychosocial
agents. Contrary to claims that the DPEC/DPOC distinction is supercilious (Edley,
2001) or oxymoronic (Drewery, 2000), the importance of debating what ontology can
mean for psychology is herein seen as central to the pursuit of personal, relational and
collective wellness in contemporary life