the past as prognosis: a prismatic history of...

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The Past as Prognosis: A Prismatic History of Theories of Aging W. Andrew Achenbaum The principle of Unripe Time is that people should not do at the present moment what they think right at that moment, because the moment which they think it is right has not yet arrived (Cornford, 1908, ch. 7). C. M. Cornford’s observation is an apt epigraph for us. Some of gerontology’s founders promulgated or borrowed theories to guide research on aging. Their approaches to theory-building never proved quite timely, however. Those who applied grand theories rarely sustained explanations with acceptable data. Even now most gerontological theories nowadays illuminate disciplinary-based perspectives more eectively than do inter-disciplinary constructs. Is Cornford’s contention still relevant today? We do not need to inventory every theory to answer the question. Nor is another meta-theoretical analysis required (Achenbaum, 2009). What follows is a prismatic history (Weber and Orsborn, 2015)—a selective, select account of theory-building in the field, which ideally stirs gerontological imaginations about future theoretical work. Laying the Foundations for Theory-Building in Gerontology 1

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The Past as Prognosis:

A Prismatic History of Theories of Aging

W. Andrew Achenbaum

The principle of Unripe Time is that people should not do at the present

moment what they think right at that moment, because the moment which

they think it is right has not yet arrived (Cornford, 1908, ch. 7).

C. M. Cornford’s observation is an apt epigraph for us. Some of gerontology’s

founders promulgated or borrowed theories to guide research on aging. Their

approaches to theory-building never proved quite timely, however. Those who applied

grand theories rarely sustained explanations with acceptable data. Even now most

gerontological theories nowadays illuminate disciplinary-based perspectives more

effectively than do inter-disciplinary constructs.

Is Cornford’s contention still relevant today? We do not need to inventory every

theory to answer the question. Nor is another meta-theoretical analysis required

(Achenbaum, 2009). What follows is a prismatic history (Weber and Orsborn, 2015)—a

selective, select account of theory-building in the field, which ideally stirs

gerontological imaginations about future theoretical work.

Laying the Foundations for Theory-Building in Gerontology

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Cornford wrote five years after Elie Metchnikoff first pioneered The Nature of

Man (1903). Philosophers and alchemists predated Metchnikoff by more than a

millennium (Gruman, 1966; Cole, 1992), but it was the Nobel Laureate that headed the

Pasteur Institute who coined the term “gerontology.” Metchnikoff contended that “we

must first understand the most intimate details of its mechanism” before “an optimistic

philosophy of senescence” alleviated the ravages of age. Based on work in pathology,

cytology, and immunology, Metchnikoff formulated “phagocytosis,” an interdisciplinary

theory of aging hypothesizing that large intestinal white blood cells destroyed

microbes that hastened premature senility in humans, apes, dogs, and plants

(Metchnikoff, 1908); the construct anticipated various degenerative and wear-and-tear

theories. Peers discounted both Metchnikoff’s attempt at grand theory-making and his

remedy (eating yoghurt, believed Metchnikoff, could kill pathological macrophages)—

but not his commitment to scientific method.

Acknowledging that Metchnikoff’s was “the most prominent theory of ageing

today” (1914: 41), I.L. Nascher nevertheless proceeded differently in Geriatrics.

Nascher, a physician who cared for aging patients in clinics and almshouses,

challenged Metchnikoff’s premise—one grounded in conventional wisdom--that old

age was a chronic disease. Instead, Nascher identified late years as an age-specific,

physiological stage of life. He weighed causes of aging in terms of averages.

Nascher distinguished normal processes of aging from diseases. “Many theories

have been advanced to account for this ageing,” Nascher declared (1914: 39). “A

scientific theory of life must have a comprehensible basis though we may not be able

to prove the theory or the existence of the basis, with our present methods of

investigation.” The observation characterized the paucity of efficacious theory-

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building in gerontology’s formative decades. (Dr. Nascher in 1926 admitted to being

the only geriatrician in the U.S.) Nascher proved more adept at debunking late-19th

century theories about gland degeneration as a pathological cause of aging (as set

forth by Sir Victor Horsley and by Arnold Lorand) than advancing his theory of tissue-

cell evolution “based upon some facts and some assumptions” (Nascher, 1914: 42-43;

see also, Nascher, 1926). No wonder theorists sharply disagreed about whether aging

was a disease or senescence were a natural process.

Early cross-disciplinary and disciplinary-based age-specific approaches to

theory-building

Retired psychologist G. Stanley Hall melded his interests in old age and death in

Senescence (1922), a bookend to his definitive 2-volume exposition of Adolescence

(1904). “There are few specialists in gerontology even among physicians,” Hall

realized (1922: viii). “I was alone, indeed in a new kind of solitude, and must pursue

the rest of my life in a way in life by a more or less individual research as to how to

keep well and at the top of my condition” (Hall, 1922: xv). A student of William James,

Hall sought to smash “cheap and chipper paradoxes” (p. 133) through inductive

reasoning.

Chapters 2 and 3 of Senescence showcased cross-disciplinary research in

gerontology, garnering insights from historical and literary perspectives. Besides

presenting cross-national statistics on old age, its care as well as medical

interventions, Hall (1922: 257ff) critiqued efforts at theory-building by Metchnikoff

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and other bio-medical researchers. Hall then offered results from a survey in which he

“selected a few score of names of mostly eminent and some very distinguished old

people, both acquaintances and strangers” (Hall, 1922: 321). Responses revealed

surprisingly diverse feelings about growing older, and practicalities about diet and

hygiene, and intergenerational ties.

In lieu of grand theory, Hall delivered a “thesis” of aging that undercut prevailing

notions of decline and obsolescence:

Intelligent and well-conserved senectitude has very important social and

anthropological functions in the modern world not hitherto utilized or even

recognized. The chief of these is most comprehensively designated by the

general term synthesis (Hall, 1922: 405).

Rather than equate senectitude with senility, Senescence looked forward to latter-day

models of “successful aging.” Furthermore, half a century before the Riley’s work on

aging and society (1969-1972), Hall demonstrated how structural and cultural lags

impede meaningful aging. Senescence did not conclude on an uplifting note; the last

eighty pages treat the psychology of death, bolstered with scripture, science, and

philosophy. Like Metchnikoff, Hall believed that gerontology must take account of

finitude.

G. Stanley Hall tried to incorporate cross-disciplinary insights into a

multifaceted model of aging; his contemporaries in the bio-medical sciences held that

any quest for a unified science of gerontology was futile (Achenbaum, 1995: 54-84).

To advance gerontological knowledge between the World Wars meant giving the best

minds resources to solve complex puzzles, with results disseminated to the scientific

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community. A few learned societies and foundations promoted gerontology. “Here

was virgin territory with broad implications for many of the biological, medical, and

social sciences,” recalled an officer of the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation (1950: 32). “Here

was an opportunity for a foundation to assist in the development of a new field of

science which, by its nature, demanded the integration of data, methods, and concepts

from many special branches—a coordinate, multi-professional approach.”

The Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation invited Edmund V. Cowdry, an anatomist and

cytologist who had compiled a handbook on arteriosclerosis, to assemble a team to

probe Problems of Ageing (1939). Cowdry recruited 25 stars, men who knew each

other’s research from conferences at Woods Hole or work in the Union of American

Biologists. In 758 pages the collaborators reported how their particular discipline

illuminated some mechanism or process of aging--in plants, insects, invertebrates and

vertebrates. Others dealt with human cells, tissues, organs, functions, or systems.

Cowdry accepted one chapter on longevity, one each on anthropology and psychology,

and a final contribution from a clinician. Significantly, no scientist proposed a cross-

or inter-disciplinary theory of aging in Problems of Ageing, though investigators later

adapted the “ageing of homeostatic mechanisms” (Cannon, 1939: 624), which rested

on theories of a 19th-century physiologist.

Reflexivity in foundational gerontological theory-building

Two contributors to Cowdry’s Problems of Ageing entertained issues of cause

and effect in aging. Columbia University philosopher John Dewey wanted more work to

be done before seeking common ground across disciplines. “The present volume of

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studies is itself evidence of the new recognition of the importance of the problem of

ageing,” observed Dewey (1939: xxii). “They provide the needed base line, for they

disclose basic conditions which in any case must be taken into account.” Investigators

had to describe basic conditions and to identify methods and means that bridge the

cellular and organic, biological processes and cultural norms. “Biological processes are

at the root of the problems and of the methods of solving them, but the biological

processes take place in economic, political, and cultural contexts” (Dewey, 1939: xxvi).

Dewey privileged biology because “biology as a science brings to the foreground of

attention the significance of Growth in a way in which underlying physical sciences do

not” (ibid.).

Lawrence K. Frank, a Macy Foundation’s program officer, emphasized inter-

disciplinary syntheses more than Dewey. Frank (like Metchnikoff and Nascher) wished

to disentangle “cumulative but physiological involutions that inevitably take place in all

individuals as they grow older, and pathological changes that occur in ageing

individuals as the result of adverse environmental conditions” (Frank, 1939: xiii). In

three ways Frank endeavored to reframe recent work in gerontology. First Frank, a

social psychologist who studied child development, urged a life-course approach. He

wanted to determine whether “changes represent the process of ageing or rather

pathological deviations which conceivably might have been avoided or minimized in

early years” (Frank, 1939: xvi). Second, Frank (1946: 3) probed the relationship

between time and aging: he shared Alexis Carrel’s opinion that chronological time

failed to differentiate rates of aging within and across organisms. Third, lacking a

general theory of aging, Frank nonetheless urged gerontologists to consider the

“fruitfulness of the ‘field’ concept in embryology” (Frank, 1939: xvI) in measuring

structural changes in organisms.

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“The lack of theoretical clarity,” declared Frank (1946: 7), hampered

gerontology, “an enterprise calling for many and diversified studies.” He added that

“for an adequate formulation of the larger problem of aging, field theory may offer a

much needed conceptual tool for grasping the totality of organic structures and

functioning,” by utilizing basic and applied research. Invoking Dr. George Morris

Piersol’s vision of “not more years to life, but more life to years,” Frank recommended

“creating new designs for living in and through which the aging individual can find

what will be appropriate to his needs, capacities and interests” (Frank, 1946: 10).

Multi-disciplinary perspectives, he stressed, “command the interest and devotion of a

variety of scientists, scholars, and professional workers, all of whom are needed to

study such problems as human growth, development and aging, ecology and regional

planning, mental hygiene, human conservation, or cultural change” (Frank, 1946: 1)

Postwar pioneers do not resolve theoretical debates in gerontology

By the time that the 3d, expanded edition of Cowdry’s Problems of Ageing

appeared (Lansing, 1952), two scientific organizations—the American Geriatrics Society

(1942) and the Gerontological Society of America (GSA, 1945)—had been organized.

Among the newly emergent gerontologists, three individuals epitomize divergent

engagements in theory-building.

Physiologist Nathan W. Shock (1906-1989) did post-doctoral training with

Lawrence K. Frank. Like Hall, he sought insights in gerontology from any reliable

sources. Shock published more than 350 research articles on biochemical, behavoral,

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and physiological aspects of aging. He built the Gerontology Research Center and

launched the Baltimore Longitudinal Studies in Aging.

Shock, however, did not emphasize theory-building. “Research is a technical

operation,” Shock noted in Trends in Gerontology (1952: 114). “This formulation of

questions and the design of adequately controlled procedure of adequately controlled

procedures and observations are the essence of research.” Measurements, he insisted,

decomposed big issues into manageable questions. Shock encouraged trainees

(including three future GSA presidents) to generate well-documented “facts” in

measuring differences between aging and disease. “Give me a testable hypothesis,”

Shock stated. “It is worth a thousand theories” (Achenbaum & Albert, 1995: 324).

James E. Birren (1918--) collaborated on aging projects with Nathan Shock at the

National Institutes of Health, and then spent most of career based in Los Angeles,

promoting research and training in gerontology, and “investigating how biological and

environmental factors modulated behavioral expressions of physiological

mechanisms” (Achenbaum & Albert, 1995: 35). In the scientific tradition of Cowdry’s

Problems of Ageing, Birren compiled multiple editions of aging handbooks and several

encyclopedia of gerontology.

Like Cowdry, Birren favored expansively disciplinary inquiries that ultimately would

advance an integrative science. “There is an opportunity for many kinds of significant

research,” declared Birren (1961: 40), “and in the diversity of our studies we should be

increasingly explicit about our (sic) problems, theories, designs, controls, methods,

and analyses of results.” Birren often repeated these keywords in terms of

“counterpart theory,” a pluralistic paradigm amenable to analyses of concepts and

methods. He used metaphors such as “senescing,” “eldering,” and “geronting” to refer

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to biological, social, and psychological processes. While advocating for unity in the

gerontological sciences, Birren bemoaned the field’s fragmentation. “Current theories

in gerontology are actually microtheories,” he declared (1988: ix), “they do not, in

general embrace larger perspectives or information from different domains of the

behavioral, social, and biological sciences or from the humanities.”

Early in a career spent mainly in medical facilities, Robert Kastenbaum

(1933-2013) emerged as an important theory-builder in aging. Like Frank and Birren,

he pursued the relationship of time to human development, as well as to habituation

and death. “In theories of aging: the search for a conceptual framework” (1965),

Kastenbaum underscored the divergence between bio-medical and psychosocial

processes: “Aging is a multilevel phenomenon, either in a systematic or random

sense” (1965: 17).

Still, Kastenbaum saw possibilities for convergence: “Although not all theories move

with equal ease in all directions, there is also the shared conviction that one must

somehow come to terms with phenomena at all levels of human behavior and

experience” (1965: 35). Later Kastenbaum echoed Birren’s concern about what his

colleagues fragmentized: “I do not know which is more peculiar: disciplined biological

research veering off into uncontrolled, speculative morality, or psychosocial theory

concerned with the quality of inner experience and the entire network of human

relationships” (1978: 62). Experts surely need to specialize, Kastenbaum affirmed, but

they should also enrich understandings of aging’s totality.

At least two consistent themes emerge from this prismatic perspective on the

formative period of gerontological theory-building. On the one hand, most writers

sharply distinguished between aging and disease. “Everyone aspires to a long life, but

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no one wants to be old” (Shock, 1961: 14). On the other hand, gerontology’s founders

valued cross-disciplinary investigations as well as disciplinary-specific research.

However aspects of aging were categorized—macro/micro, by genus or species, or in

terms of bio-medical/psycho-social—specialists wished to incorporate the most

appropriate tools and techniques to address the particular problem aging under

investigation.

The founding fathers did not leave a clear, consistent set of opinions concerning

the role of theory in combining disparate clusters of data. Disparate approaches to

problem-solving presage conceptual disputes in gerontology today. To Shock and

many contributors to Cowdry’s Problems of Ageing, theories detracted attention from

the pressing task of studying phenomena with appropriate measurements. To others,

like Nascher and Cowdry, distinguishing between pathological and physiological

dimensions sufficed. Metchnikoff, on the other hand, based investigations on theory.

Frank thought the science of gerontology would develop once investigators adopted a

construct (like field theory) pliable in different scientific settings. Birren saw value in

mini-theories though (like Cannon) he felt models and metaphors sufficed in the

absence of formal theory. How ironic, then, that a grand theory of aging polarized

gerontologists in the 1960s.

Theories of Successful Aging, Disengagement, and Adjustment/Activity

“The science of gerontology has its practical purpose,” began Robert J.

Havighurst in The Gerontologist’s premier issue. “In order to give good advice, it is

essential that gerontology have a theory of successful aging” (Havighurst, 1961:8).

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Havighurst’s hortatory comment signaled a new phase in gerontological theory-

building. Theories were to be taken seriously as explanatory vehicles. Havighurst took

steps to ensure that the behavioral and social sciences influenced the task.

Long before Rowe and Kahn’s Successful Aging (1998), Havighurst noted that

two theories of successful aging prevailed in the field. Activity Theory, “favored by

most of the practical workers in the field of gerontology” (Havighurst, 1961: 8), posited

that maintaining attitudes and activities associated with middle age as long and as far

as possible promoted successful aging. In contrast, proponents of Disengagement

Theory hypothesized that successfully aging individuals accepted and acquiesced to

the process of withdrawing from active life. Before privileging one of these competing

models, Havighurst urged, researchers had to settle upon “an operational definition of

successful aging and a method of measuring the degree to which people fit this

definition” (Havighurst, 1961: 9).

Havighurst realized that his peers would resist, but until investigators could

describe successful aging, they “should not assume that either activity or

disengagement is desirable” (ibid.). Theory testing would be difficult: “There are a

number of procedures for the measurement of successful aging, and all of them have

been criticized” (ibid.). Havighurst nonetheless thought it “possible to develop an

instrument (such as he constructed with Albrecht [1953]) to measure the social

acceptability of a person’s behavior and consequently the degree of his success in

aging” (ibid.). “As long as there is disagreement as to what constitutes successful

aging, caution must be used in selecting measures of successful aging” (Havighurst,

1961: 12).

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Although gerontologists in 1961 had neither an overarching paradigm nor

agreed-upon measurements, Havighurst believed that merging elements of Activity

and Disengagement theories could explain processes of aging:

Undoubtedly there is a disengaging force operating on and within people as

they pass 70 and 80. But they will still retain the personality-life style

characteristics of their middle years; those who were happy and satisfied by

being active and productive then will continue to be happy and satisfied if they

can maintain a considerable part of their activity and productiveness; and those

who were happy and satisfied by being relatively passive and dependent in their

middle years will be happy and satisfied if they can become even more

disengaged in their later years (ibid.)

Havighurst showed how to effect integrative theory-building in gerontology.

Definitions of “successful aging” required a life course perspective to explain diverse

patterns of senescing. Attitudes and activities in later years vary; perspectives and

values change over time. Still, advocates of Disengagement theory, he predicted,

would reject measurement scales for Activity theory, and vice versa.

At 61 Robert J. Havighurst was a respected idea-broker (Achenbaum & Albert,

1995: 158-161). He chaired the University of Chicago’s Committee on Human

Development (CHD), after teaching physics and chemistry. In the 1930s he was at the

Rockefeller Foundation and then moved to the Macy Foundation to work with Lawrence

Frank. At Chicago, with colleagues in psychology, anthropology, sociology, and

education, he made CHD a premier center for research and training in gerontology.

Havighurst’s own policy-relevant studies dealt with the personality development of

Native American children. After World War II, Havighurst studied seniors’ activities and

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resilience; he published Personal Adjustment in Old Age with Ruth Shonle Cavan

(1949), Older People with Ruth Albrecht (1949), and The Meaning of Work and

Retirement with E. A. Friedmann (1954). A grant from the Carnegie Corporation

supported CHD faculty and students in the field, a decade-long inquiry in Kansas City

into middle age and aging. Disengagement and Activity theorists gathered data they

interpreted radically differently.

Theoretical disagreements between the Disengagement and Activity teams have

been ably analyzed (Hochschild, 1975; Thornstam, 1989; Achenbaum & Bengtson,

1994; Lynott & Lynott, 1996). Elaine Cumming and William Henry in Growing Old: The

Process of Disengagement said that (1) they had developed “an inductive theory of

aging to fit [their] data” and (2)postulated that “aging is an inevitable, mutual

withdrawal or disengagement, resulting in decreased interaction between the aging

person and others in the social system he belongs to” (Cumming & Henry, 1961: 227,

14). Disengagement Theory had merits. Some people did withdraw from everyday

activities. Cumming and Henry (1961: 227) shared Shock’s opinion that “there is

nothing so practical as a good theory.” Growing Old’s modus operandi resembled

homeostatic maneuvers, moving from concept to data and then back again. This [is]

an important book,” Talcott Parsons proclaimed in his Foreword, “probably the most

serious attempt to put forward a general theoretical interpretation of the social and

psychological nature of the aging process in American society.”

Yet criticisms immediately surfaced about Disengagement Theory. AT CHD

debaters clashed over the operational definitions and measurements grounding

gerontological theorizing. Intellectual jousting usually sharpens critical thinking, but

protagonists held fast to their positions in Unripe Time. Havighurst thought the

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Kansas City data undercut the inexorability of disengagement; his investigators

portrayed the old as active, adjusting sights to fit their stamina. Bernice Neugarten

cautioned against falsely assuming that senescence was homogenous; variations in

gender, race, and class created disparate pathways to aging. To presume that biology

is destiny (to her) was unfounded.

No theorist won the Disengagement- Activity debate. Cumming and Henry

disengaged from gerontology. Havighurst pursued topics in aging while studying

children and youth. Neugarten even-handedly criticized Disengagement Theory in

Middle Age and Aging (1968), while designing paradigms of age she would apply in

Federal policy circles. Disengagement theory was shelved.

The controversy over Growing Old represents an important moment in the

history of theories of age and aging. The debate underscored the necessity to unveil

sound, empirically grounded ideas. But most researchers sought promotions and

raises in home departments over pursuing gerontological reputations. In the vagaries

of Unripe Time, gerontologists could postpone theory-building.

Disengagement Theory’s fate, of course, was not the only disincentive to

theory-building in gerontology from (roughly) the mid-1960s to the 1980s. Bench

scientists proposed scores of explanatory theories about cells, rarely useful to

psychologists or social workers. In their rhetoric gerontologists lauded integrative

puzzle solving, knowing that their efforts were vetted by peers in one of the

Gerontological Society’s divisions. Basic and applied researchers rarely collaborated.

The gerontology community prioritized micro-theories, not grand syntheses, as

building blocks. “The major new concern then came to be the dialectical relationship

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between fact and explanation,” contended Lynott & Lynott (1996: 754); “our

understanding of the facts of aging not only grows with their accumulation, but with

the transformations in our understanding as well.” Gerontologists honed existing

modes of scientific measurement. “One’s confidence in truth telling and knowledge

building is contingent upon the reliability of evidence under scrutiny,” observed

Bookstein and Achenbaum (1993: 21). “Researchers must believe that the

observations that they and their colleagues generate bear close correspondence to the

reality they purport to describe.”

Critiquing a proliferation of mico-theories and meta-theories in aging

Emergent Theories of Aging,edited by James Birren and Vern Bengtson,

represents another step to promote interest in gerontological theory-building: ”The

present volume is an attempt by researchers to begin to address the data-rich but

theory-poor state of the current research on aging, and to encourage cross-

disciplinary interchange that focuses on theory development in aging” (1988: ix).

Birren and Gary Kenyon (1986) prepared a catalog of roughly 225 works dealing with

theories of aging in biology, psychology, sociology, and the humanities. “The wide

scope of the field and, more recently, the high level of its activity and research

productivity have resulted in the creation of islands of knowledge with little

communication between them,” stated Birren & Bengtson (1988: ix). “Current theories

in gerontology are actually microtheories; they do not, in general, embrace larger

perspectives or information from the different domains.” Were the pair right that the

time had come to stop treating theory-building in gerontology as a secondary issue?

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For more than 25 years, interest has grown in gerontological theory-making.

Increasing specialization and the advent of new (hybrid) fields of inquiry, however,

entice researchers in aging to explain more and more about less and less.

Practitioners still tend to use theories from their own or adjoining disciplines, although

the aging community increasingly welcomes its own cross-disciplinary theories and

interdisciplinary models.

Meta-theories of aging have become important, because they embody

consilience--interlocking strands of principles and rules that describe and direct

scientific exploration: “A balanced perspective cannot be acquired by studying

disciplines in pieces; the consilience gives purpose to intellect. It promises that order

not chaos lies beyond the horizon” (Wilson, 1988). Biologist Vincent Cristofalo (1996),

identifying no unified biological theory of aging, reduced models into groupings of

stochastic and developmental-genetic theories. Joannes J.F. Schroots (1996: 743), who

presents a dozen theories of aging, cited Birren’s contention that “there is no major

theory or underlying metaphor that links the various areas of psychology.” Social

scientists created normative models, linkages, and interpretations (Marshall, 1999:

438). Glenn Elder (1998) and Peter Uhlenberg (2004) trumpeted life-course theories,

which prompted Cumulative Advantage/Disadvantage theory (Dannefer, 2000) and an

“Aging and Cumulative Inequality” model (Ferraro, 2009) respectively.

New voices joined the conversation, “identifying themes of meaning that emerge

from their research” (Bengtson et al., 1996: 769). First, experts in the humanities

occasionally played Cassandra. The Need for Theory: Critical Approaches to Social

Gerontology castigated both Emergent Theories of Aging and its successor (Bengtson

& Schaie, 1999): “What emerged was a surprisingly atheoretical handbook on theory.

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Perhaps it is reflective of the historic nature of the field rather than the state of the

art” (Biggs et al, 2003: 3; see also Krause, 2009: 112). Second, as feminist theorists

(Holstein,1999; Ray, 2006) listened to inner voices of aging, Carroll Estes (2001)

dissected gendered dysfunctions in policy and practice. Third, macro-theorists

bridged the gap among theory, observations, and practice: “A well-grounded theory

and a well-theorized applied model hold great promise by generating further research

by giving direction, articulating, and specifying more stringent conditions for the

development of knowledge” (Hendricks et al., 2010: 293).

“We feel that there is a need to reestablish the importance of theory in the

discourse about problems of aging,” announced Vern Bengtson and Warner Schaie in

the first edition of the Handbook of theories of aging. “We feel it is valuable to

emphasize the primacy of explanations in the vastly expanding scientific literature

reporting empirical findings about aging” (Bengtson & Schaie, 1999: ix). Bengtson and

his associate editors (2009: xxii) showcased “attempts to explain” in the 2d edition of

the Handbook of the Theories of Aging. Contributors were encouraged to cross

disciplinary boundaries in explicating processes of aging. “Perhaps no where is this

more visible than in the growth of cross-disciplinary studies concerning the

mechanisms of aging” (Bengtson et al, 2009: xxi).

Despite much progress, cultural lags and structural barriers remained.

Achenbaum & Levin (1989) recounted historical disagreements over definitions of

gerontology (see also, Bass, 2013: 7). Setterston and Dobransky (2000: 369)

underscored disconnects: “As biological phenomena are theorized, they are more

isolated from the psychological and social; as psychological phenomena are theorized,

they more often incorporate the biological; and as social phenomena are theorized,

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they are more often considered in the conjunction with the biological and

psychological” (see also Bengtson et al., 1999: 22-23). Kenneth Ferraro (2008: S4),

reviewing the “greatest hits” cited in the Journal of Gerontology, substantiated Shock’s

observation that “measurement is the basis of all science.” From this perspective,

methods trump ideas.

Theory’s place in major aging texts remains mixed. In the lead chapter of the

Cambridge handbook of age and aging (Johnson et al., 2005) addresses “the problem

of theory in gerontology today” and devotes 20 lines to the topic in the index.

Theorists Dale Dannefer and Chris Philliipson, in contrast, included neither a chapter

nor a reference to “theory” in the index of their Sage Handbook of Social Gerontology

(2010). In Successful Aging John Rowe and Robert Kahn (1998: xii) were “committed to

an interdisciplinary research program…which was actually a coherent set of dozens of

individual research projects,” not bound by any overarching theory.

Connections deepen between theory and research--“When there is not a body of

relevant theory, researchers often do not know where to turn” (Longino, 2005: S172)--

yet impediments remain. “Part of gerontology’s strength—its explicit drawing upon a

range of disciplines to understand the aging individual within a societal context—has

also been part of its difficulty in building fundamental theoretical constructs” (Bass,

2006:139). Historical interpretations, which might inform theory-building, appear

more taxonomic than heuristic. Jon Hendricks (1992), weary of disembodied ideas,

reconstructed the succession of scholarly attempts to study aging. Alluding to

Hendricks’ generational history, Vern Bengtson and associates argued (1997: S76) that

“previous successes (and failures) at explanation provide crucial viewpoints from which

to assess the adequacy of our own empirical efforts” (see also Marshall, 1999: 436).

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Is it worth reconstructing a useable past in gerontological theory building?

Gerontologists demolished Disengagement Theory in Unripe Time. Not even a

giant like Robert Havighurst could salvage parts of Activity Theory in order to sustain

his pioneering theory of successful aging. Ironically, in this highly competitive era for

diminishing resources, it finally might prove timely to update theories from our

collective past. For instance, there are underappreciated corollaries in Cumming and

Henry’s Growing old, which could trigger investigations. Unnoticed are the authors’

explications of gender disparities (1961: ch. 6, 8) and generational tensions (1961: ch.

13). Two other motifs merit elaboration:

First, the study of the Fourth Age. “Very old people often have a surprisingly

high level of social competence and seem able to maintain high spirits,” Cumming and

Henry declared (1961: 201-202). “There may be a group of people who, more than

being merely survivors, have a special biological invulnerability.” Americans usually

focus on the young-old whereas many British scholars are fascinated with the

dimensions of advanced years. While “’old age’ proper becomes tautologically

synonymous with decline,” notes Susan Pickard (2014: 1279-80, 1289), “positive

experiences of embodiment in the ‘fourth age’ point the way to extending the space of

self-actualisation to the whole life span where currently the fear of ageing casts its

long shadow far into youth, as well as encouraging increasing recognition of, and

research focus upon, ambiguous categories such as the good life in old age.”

The second issue deals with Aging and Death. “As a matter of fact, death is

excluded from most of the literature on aging, and it emerges only occasionally as if by

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accident.” Cumming and Henry observed (1961: 18). “This is probably a direct

consequence of the belief in the desirability of an ever-expanding life.” Few theories

yet conjoin gerontology and thanatology. “Whatever the reasons, there is a marked

aversion to addressing end-of-life issues among researchers and writers on aging,”

opines Malcolm Johnson (2009: 659). “While we may describe our field of study as ‘the

study of aging and the life span,’ comparatively little attention is given in the literature

to the far end of life span—death—or psychosocial aspects of the endings of lives.”

Having arrived at Ripe Time, what should gerontologists do? Should they echo

Henry Ford’s claim that “history is bunk?” Or, should theoreticians reconstruct a

useable past? Surely it makes sense to revisit Metchnikoff and Hall who theorized

about the old-old and death, incorporating dependency, debility, and demise into a

web of positivist paradigms. The exercise might induce the current generation of

gerontologists to think out of the box, to integrate gerontological insights with ideas

advanced by disability experts or Queer theorists, whose theoretical literature is richer

than ours. We might look inward to theories of global aging or legal/financial

gerontology. There are bound to be pay-offs: “Time can and should play a more

important role because it can change the ontological description and meaning of a

theoretical construct and of the relationships between constructs” (George & Jones,

2000: 657). To the extent that past masters serve as prognosticators, empirically

tested, historical nuggets might prompt a paradigm shift in how we perceive and

experience aging. Rather than shelve what we deem to be obsolescent theories,

emerging scholars’ critical thinking about our roots just might advance gerontological

theory-building in fruitful and timely ways.

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W. Andrew Achenbaum is a professor of history and social work at the University of

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Medical Center.

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