[Xmca-l] Re: XMCA discourse

mike cole mcole@ucsd.edu
Sun Oct 12 12:40:51 PDT 2014


Glad the summary cuts and pastes were helpful, Rod. My idea was that they
might serve as a kind of "cliff notes" intro, which in your case was a
reminder. I have done the same for the Shotter article on "withness" that
you sent around, but have not had time to recover that part of the
discussion and introduce it in a productive way.

I can't at present go on to the ANL article, but will briefly comment on
the Nicaraguan sign language example. I agree with your analysis. But I
wanted to address my concern with the way the notion of the "ideal form" as
the "end in the beginning" is that it seems to preclude any form of change
that is not in the thrall of that ideal form to count as anything but
deviation from the ideal, no room for transformation. I say "seems" because
I know and value LSV's work on imagination and creativity at lot. Still, as
formulated here, in the land where Comrade Stalin shaped what counted as
the ideal form, it arose for me as an issue when I was re-reading it.

I also want to inquire into the relationship between word meaning as a unit
of analysis for the relation between thought and language, and perezhivanie
as a unit of analysis for the thought and emotion. The pairing links
language, thought, and emotion as constituents of experience
(perezhivanie).

I look forward to re-reading the ANL critique of LSV... later.
mike

On Sun, Oct 12, 2014 at 12:09 PM, Rod Parker-Rees <
R.Parker-Rees@plymouth.ac.uk> wrote:

> Many thanks for your digest of the LSV article, Mike. It is a while since
> I last read it so this was a valuable refresher and meant I felt I could go
> straight to the ANL article which I have not seen before.
>
> Reading the ANL article I was acutely aware of the gulf between my
> environment and that in which ANL was writing. Perhaps the fact that I feel
> this rather less when reading LSV is evidence of a closer fit between my
> bourgeois environmenn and his. As I understand it, and I am far from
> confident in this, ANL's main issue is with LSV's suggestion that
> 'experiencing' or perezhivanie should be used as a unit of activity,
> representing the indissoluble relationship between the environment and the
> individual. ANL appears to object to this because he sees experiencing as
> an abstraction from activity which should be recognised as the true core of
> what makes us human. The argument that an environment is only an
> environment FOR an active subject reminded me of Uetzkull's 'umwelt' the
> unique world of experience constructed by an organism in the course of its
> activity (including its sensing activity) but I am not sure that ANL
> justifies his insistence on not acknowleding experiencING as a form of
> activity ('experience is a secondary and derivative fact' - p.22).
>
> ANL appears to be driven by a preference for 'putting the question in its
> completely clear and bare form' (p.17) but this involves a series of
> assertions and rhetorical strong-arm tactics which I find difficult to
> accept. For example, he chooses to 'set aside the complicated idea of the
> different course of development of the "spontaneous" and "scientific"
> concepts' (p.18) - an idea which I have always found particularly helpful
> and he insists that 'meaning always takes the form of the meaning of a
> word' (p.18) - denying the possibility that a smile, a raised eyebrow,
> rolled eyes or a raised fist could carry meaning.
>
> I am not sure that the creation of a sign language among Nicaraguan deaf
> children can be taken as a counter example to LSV's argument that children
> are able to benefit from an environment which includes the 'ideal form' of
> abilities they are just beginning to develop. The children who were brought
> together from isolated families and then co-constructed a sophisticated
> sign language may not have been surrounded by an 'ideal form' of language
> which they could fully experience (I believe most were children of hearing
> parents and so experienced only a rudimentary, home-made form of home-sign)
> but they WERE surrounded by people who showed them that people communicate
> with each other so they were exposed to the 'ideal form' of
> communication-mediated cooperative activity even if they were not able to
> pick out the finer details of how it was achieved. As in other situations
> where children grow up among people who use a simplified ('pidgin') form of
> communication, their sensitivity to patterns, rules and regularities
> allowed them to refine it into a coherent, flexible language (a 'creole').
> I am uncomfortable with the use of 'final form' as an alternative to 'ideal
> form' because every generation does similar things with the language it
> inherits - adjusting and refining it to achieve a better fit with changing
> social practices. Indeed this (as well as the socio-political distance
> between us) may explain some of the difficulties I have with ANL's way of
> asserting his arguments.
>
> LSV acknowledged the important role of 'spontaneous concepts' - the often
> unacknowledged intuitions which arise out of our unique patterns of
> experience and which give 'body and vitality' to the more abstract, 'clear
> and bare' concepts which allow us to communicate with others - while ANL
> would appear to prefer a tidier view of things.
>
> I look forward to hearing what others make of the comparison between the
> two papers.
>
>  All the best,
>
> Rod
>
>
> ________________________________________
> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu [xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu]
> on behalf of mike cole [mcole@ucsd.edu]
> Sent: 12 October 2014 17:55
> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: XMCA discourse
>
> Diane- (I neglected to turn off my computer!). There are now more that 800
> people signed up for XMCA. If every started typing at once, we might crash
> the ucsd server it sits on. And if it is just brownian motion in alphabetic
> characters, what's the point? It WOULD be good to hear from more people. At
> earlier times, i have tried to work out an arrangements where a dozen
> partricipants each volunteered to organize a discussion on a topic of
> potential interest for a month as a means of increasing breadth of
> participation and points of view. It has never worked.
>
> Perhaps it could be tried again..... if someone other than me would like to
> organize it!
>
> Like henry, I use wikipedia a lot as a starting point. For the disucssion
> of the LSV article on the environment I would recommend that people
> google *senghas
> nicaraguan sign language. *My conjecture is the the evidence of what
> happens if a lot of deaf kids are brought together without access to an
> appropriate "ideal form" (see the LSV paper for significance of that term)
> contradicts LSV's argument and has implications for general aspects of
> theory. But first there has to be that co-reading so we are not simply
>  tangling each other up in a new way.
> mike
>
> On Sun, Oct 12, 2014 at 9:44 AM, Diane Potts <djpotts7@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > >From one of the many lurkers...
> >
> > As a new academic and one who shares David Kellogg's interests in SFL,
> > language education and socio-historical theory, I benefit tremendously
> from
> > this listserv.  I recommend it regularly to PhD students and hold it up
> as
> > a model of an online community that has managed to continue to engage in
> > lively discussions about current research with the participation of
> senior
> > scholars. Centering those discussions on readings, at least to me, seems
> to
> > be an effective means of carrying out the community's boundary work - not
> > always pleasant work, I'll admit, but one that gives coherence to who we
> > are.
> >
> > Diane Potts
> > Lancaster University
> >
> > > From: leifstrandberg.ab@telia.com
> > > Date: Sun, 12 Oct 2014 18:23:52 +0200
> > > To: xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu
> > > Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: XMCA discourse
> > >
> > > continue :-)
> > >
> > > Leif
> > > Sweden
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
> --
> It is the dilemma of psychology to deal with a natural science with an
> object that creates history. Ernst Boesch.
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-- 
It is the dilemma of psychology to deal with a natural science with an
object that creates history. Ernst Boesch.


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