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Re: [xmca] Classical German Philosophy



Michael-
Right, mutual constitution. But the problem of saying everything about
everything remains. Its kind of like Kenneth Burke who has a pentad as a
basic unit of analysis for human activity (approximately), but carries out
his analyses in terms of various
"ratios".

Can you give us references to the parts of Heidegger and Holtzkamp in
English so that us non-German readers can get connected with what have
written? The Leontiev reference was very helpful. There is so much to read!!
mike

On Sun, Mar 7, 2010 at 9:57 AM, Wolff-Michael Roth <mroth@uvic.ca> wrote:

> Hi Mike,
> the issue I want to highlight is the mutual constitution. It makes no sense
> to talk about tools as if they could be isolated and talked about
> independent of the concrete practical object/motive oriented activity. You
> cannot talk about subjectivity/identity independent of activity, and yet
> people do it all of the time. Take, for example, all those scholars who use
> interviews to get at "identity," and do not make thematic the fact that the
> interview is the activity, and its object/motive is the production of the
> interview/text. Whether the text has anything to do with the activity of a
> teacher at school, or a student at school, never (hardly every) is asked.
>
> The same, we observe scholars who are looking for and writing about the
> tools, as if the nature of the tool could be identified independent of the
> activity---
>
> This is precisely the point Heidegger makes, and – sorry Andy, you are NOT
> right on this point in your commentary – Heidegger says precisely in many
> instances what Leont'ev also says, and Heidegger did it a few years before
> Leont'ev.
>
> ((And again, sorry Andy, Heidegger works out precisely the issue of
> consciousness in activity, and the relation of the subject to the tool,
> which is at the heart of Leont'ev))
>
> Mike, what we are getting to, then, is cognition separate from life,
> cognition that makes no sense because it is not connected to the senses in
> sensual practical activity.
>
> Precisely when we substantialize the things that are part of the activity
> --- for Leont'ev, only those things are relevant that are relevant to the
> subject, and this point is brought out by Klaus Holzkamp ---- not the kind
> of stuff outside researchers bring to the situation when they take the
> triangle as the grid through which they look at situations, at activities.
> For the subject it is totally irrelevant what the researcher sees and
> thinks, and this is another form of breaking things out of an integrated and
> dynamic whole.
>
> Cheers,
> Michael
>
>
> On 2010-03-07, at 8:28 AM, mike cole wrote:
>
> Thanks Andy, and Michael for the section ref to Leontiev.
>
> Could I repeat a second part of my question which appears to have gotten
> lost in the multiple threads?
>
> Michael wrote: "you have been breaking out individual (constitutive)
> moments
> of activity and treated them as elements, much like others take the YE
> triangle and then break out the object, the subject, the division of labor,
> the tools..."
>
> I asked about how one talks about how one breaks out "moments of activity"
> (that is how I phrase the matter when I am thoughtful enough to do so),
> and,
> having highlighted them, given the impression that they are
> elements in a static sense. What sort of language does one use to be able,
> for example, to talk about a particular division of labor, without at least
> deep backgrounding, say, the tools being used or the web of social rules
> that are recruited in this instance?
>
> Even to say that "everything is connected to everything else" implies some
> notion of "things/processes" that are connected. How to avoid
> misunderstanding and distinguish it from disagreement?
> mike
>
> On Sun, Mar 7, 2010 at 2:50 AM, Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net> wrote:
>
> > If anyone is interested in exploring the German Idealists, and the roots
> of
> > Activity Theory and Cultural Psychology in their writings, I have put
> > together a page :
> > http://www.marxists.org/subject/philosophy/german.htm
> > where you can browse as you wish ...
> >
> >
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