[Xmca-l] Re: In Defense of Fuzzy Things

Andy Blunden ablunden@mira.net
Wed Jul 16 19:24:32 PDT 2014


Could you elaborate on this one, David:
"The fact that the child has not yet fully internalized that act of 
thinking does not make it any less an act of thinking" and how it 
relates to generalization?

Andy
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Andy Blunden*
http://home.pacific.net.au/~andy/


David Kellogg wrote:
> Andy:
>
> Here's what Vygotsky says in Chapter One of "Thinking and Speech".
>
> Общение, основанное на разумном понимании и на намеренной передаче 
> мысли и переживаний, непременно требует известной системы средств, 
> прототипом которой была, есть и всегда останется человеческая речь, 
> возникшая из потребности в общении в процессе труда. Но до самого 
> последнего времени дело представлено сообразно с господствовавшим в 
> психологии взглядом в чрезвычайно упрощенном виде. Полагали, что 
> средством общения является знак, слово, звук. Между тем это 
> заблуждение проистекало только из неправильно применяемого к решению 
> всей проблемы речи анализа, разлагающего на элементы.
>
> That is:
>
> "Society, based on rational understanding and intentional transfer of 
> thinking and perizhivanie, requires without fail some system of means, 
> the prototype of which is, was, and will always remain that of human 
> speech, which arose of necessity through social conotact in the 
> process of labor. But until now the matter has been presented in 
> conformity with the dominating view in psychology, in an extremely 
> simplified way. It has been assumed that the means of contact is the 
> sign, the word, the sound. This error stems solely from the incorrect 
> use in the solution of the problem of speech an analysis which 
> decomposes speech into elements."
>
> Vygotsky then points out that this analysis is incorrect because it 
> does not take into account that each word is a generalization--an act 
> of thinking. He quotes a passage of Edward Sapir which has been cut 
> from the Soviet version int the Collected Works (but which Kozulin has 
> included in his update of the Hanfmann-Vakar translation).
>
> В сфере инстинктивного сознания, в котором господствует восприятие и 
> аффект, возможно только заражение, но не понимание и не общение в 
> собственном смысле этого слова. Эдвард Сэпир прекрасно выяснил это в 
> своих работах по психологии речи. ≪Элементарный язык, . говорит он, . 
> должен быть связан с целой группой, с определенным классом нашего 
> опыта. Мир опыта должен быть чрезвычайно упрощен и обобщен, чтобы 
> возможно было символизировать его. Только так становится возможной 
> коммуникация, ибо единичный опыт живет в единичном сознании и, строго 
> говоря, не сообщаем. Для того чтобы стать сообщаемым, он должен быть 
> отнесен к известному классу, который, по молчаливому соглашению, 
> рассматривается обществом как единство≫.
>
> "In the sphere of instinctive consciousness, in which rules perception 
> and passion, only infection and contagion is possible, not 
> understanding and social contact in the true sense of the word. Edward 
> Sapir has wonderfully explained this in his work on the psychology of 
> speech. Elements of language,” he says must be connected to an entire 
> group, to a defined class of our experience. “The world of our 
> experiences must be enormously simplified and generalized before it is 
> possible to make a symbolic inventory of all our experiences of things 
> and relations; and this inventory is imperative before we can convey 
> ideas. The elements of language, the symbols that ticket off 
> experience, must therefore be associated with whole groups, delimited 
> classes, of experience rather than with the single experiences 
> themselves. Only so is communication possible, for the single 
> experience lodges in an individual consciousness and is, strictly 
> speaking, incommunicable. To be communicated it needs to be referred 
> to a class which is tacitly accepted by the community as an identity.”
>
> Vygotsky concludes that a word meaning is a generalization, and that a 
> generalization is an act of thinking. Ergo, the rational and 
> intentional transfer of thinking and of perizhivanie requires an act 
> of thinking. The fact that the child has not yet fully internalized 
> that act of thinking does not make it any less an act of thinking.
>
>
> Nor does the fact that this view was criticized by Stalinists make it 
> any less true for me. Stalinists criticized Darwinism, you know!
>
>
> David Kellogg
>
> Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On 16 July 2014 14:34, Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net 
> <mailto:ablunden@mira.net>> wrote:
>
>     David, it may seem picky, but I can't agree with this formulation
>     below, in particular the use of "thinking". To interpret Vyotsky's
>     observation in terms of "thinking" is to *intellectualise*
>     Vygotsky, or to put it another way, to impute to Vygotsky an
>     intellectualisation of human life. This move was a principal line
>     of attack of Vygotsky during the Stalinist years after his death,
>     so it is important not to repeat it now. You correctly analysed
>     the difference for a child of having a drunk for a mother, rather
>     than for a father or a neighbour. But this was not a question of
>     what the child *thought* about these relations, but the real
>     significance of each relation for the child having its vital needs
>     met, within the horizon of consciousness of the child. And I use
>     "consciousness" here as a Marxist, to indicate the entirety of
>     subjective processes of the child which mediate between their
>     physiology and their behaviour, not as a synonym for the
>     intellect. The child will perceive their situation (and threats to
>     it) in the only way they can, that is, in an age-appropriate way.
>     And they will change their own activity in response to the
>     perceived threat also in an age- and circumstances-appropriate way
>     too. All of this - significance, perception, needs - are not to be
>     interpreted as categories of thinking, but categories of the
>     life-activity of living beings, that's all, not necessarily
>     thinking. But of course, the capacity for thinking - the use of
>     symbolic actions - and the capacity for extended reflection on an
>     experience, are additional resources and points of vulnerability,
>     over and above vital relations which do not imply intellectual
>     relations.
>     Andy
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     *Andy Blunden*
>     http://home.pacific.net.au/~andy/
>     <http://home.pacific.net.au/%7Eandy/>
>
>
>     David Kellogg wrote: ...
>
>         It's not that nothing is real until thinking makes it so; it
>         is only that
>         meaning is made by thinking and not simply by experiencing. ...
>
>          
>
>
>



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