[Xmca-l] Re: Volkelt's diagram (LSV's HMF Vol 4)
Andy Blunden
ablunden@mira.net
Sun Jan 10 17:29:15 PST 2016
I am not at all clear about the context here, Mike.
Huw mentioned Vygotsky using "instances" which he thought
should have been "instants" and then David introduced
"moments" and Hegel's use of "moments," which was the
subject of my comment.
I did a search of "Thinking and Speech" and found that all
bar one instance of the use of the word "moment" were in the
sense of "at this moment in the story ..." The one odd
reference is this one:
"We have consistently taken a genetic approach to the
analysis of our problem. We have, however, attempted to
represent the *moments* of this genetic process in their
mature, classic forms. The inevitable result is that we
have diverged from the complex and twisting path that
characterizes the actual development of the child’s
concepts."
It is possible that Vygotsky refers with "moment" here to
the distinct modes of conception which were manifested in
the child's activity, at different stages, but which are
combined in the most developed pseudoconcept. It is a fact
that associative complexes, collection complexes, chain
complexes, diffuse complexes, and pseudocomplexes could not
possibly manifest themselves as successive stages. Perhaps
their *first appearance* in ontogenesis could form some kind
of regular sequence, possibly, but it is also possible that
Vygotsky saw these forms of association as "moments" of
concept formation in the other sense of the word "moment"
which is not interchangeable with "instant". But I couldn't
say for sure.
Andy
------------------------------------------------------------
*Andy Blunden*
http://home.pacific.net.au/~andy/
On 11/01/2016 11:23 AM, mike cole wrote:
> The theoretical point seems interesting and worth
> clarifying. The differing interpretations have quite
> different implications.
> mike
>
> On Sun, Jan 10, 2016 at 4:10 PM, Andy Blunden
> <ablunden@mira.net <mailto:ablunden@mira.net>> wrote:
>
> Actually, Hegel does not use "moment" as meaning a
> stage, phase or step, David. He tends to use phase,
> category, stage or division for those concepts.
>
> Individual, Particular and Universal are typical
> examples of "moments" but these are not steps, phases
> or stages of the concepts, even though they are also
> exhibited in this way. Every concrete concept has all
> three moments. In a trade union, the members, the
> branches/divisions and the general secretary are
> individual, universal and particular moments. We
> cannot conceive of a union developing from an
> individual to a branch to a general secretary, can we?
>
> I will look into the origins of this expression. I
> have always just presumed it came from mathematics, as
> in the first, second, third, ... moments of a
> function, and I know Hegel did study this branch of
> mathematics, because he gives a lot of space to it in
> the Science of Logic in his critique of calculus. But
> I am probably quite wrong. I'll check.
>
> Andy
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> *Andy Blunden*
> http://home.pacific.net.au/~andy/
> <http://home.pacific.net.au/%7Eandy/>
> On 11/01/2016 4:32 AM, David Kellogg wrote:
>
> Huw:
>
> Yes, Vygotsky uses "instants" and even more often
> "moments", and the word
> "moment" sometimes means a stage, or a phase, or a
> step (as in the three
> "moments" of the formation of the concept in
> Hegel, as in "in itself", "for
> others", "for myself".
>
> One of the most difficult problems we had to solve
> in translating the
> Lectures on Pedology was that Vygotsky very
> clearly distinguishes three
> moments of speech development: indicative,
> nominative, and signifying.
> "Indicative" is often non-verbal, e.g. a pointing
> gesture. "Nominating" is
> ipso facto verbal, because it is the naming
> function: "every thing has a
> name". But "signifying" is much harder to pin
> down, and in one place
> Vygotsky actually says that it is synonymous with
> the adult understanding
> that anything can be named. So what is the
> difference between knowing that
> everything has a name and the knowledge that any
> thing can be named?
>
> I think that the distinction is just as subtle and
> just as significant
> as the distinction between pointing to something
> with a gesture, pointing
> to something with a word like "this" or "that",
> and pointing to something
> with a word like "apple" or "pear". If I say that
> "everything has a name",
> the name could be extremely general ("everything"
> or "thing") or it could
> be highly specific ("Huw" or "this computer"). But
> I don't yet have the
> idea that names are invented, and that therefore
> it is possible to name
> objects which do not exist, and therefore to bring
> into existence modes of
> pure abstract thinking through language. That's
> signifying, and it is
> indeed a new moment, or a new instant, in the
> lifelong process of speech
> development.
>
> David Kellogg
> Macquarie University
>
> On Sun, Jan 10, 2016 at 4:04 PM, Huw Lloyd
> <huw.softdesigns@gmail.com
> <mailto:huw.softdesigns@gmail.com>>
> wrote:
>
> Thank you, David. That helps to explain a
> particular aspect that I thought
> Vygotsky was overlooking in the narrative,
> which is that stimuli can not
> only signify but also symbolise, i.e. they
> afford the kind of dynamics you
> have elucidated from Volkelt's schema.
>
> I have also noted that the translation of
> phrases like "instances of a
> process" is probably off the mark too. What
> is really meant, I believe, is
> "instants of a process". These have two
> rather different meanings from the
> perspective of thinking about processes.
>
> Best,
> Huw
>
> On 10 January 2016 at 06:02, David Kellogg
> <dkellogg60@gmail.com
> <mailto:dkellogg60@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> Huw:
>
> Here's what Vygotsky really says:
>
> Если задача не превышает естественных сил
> ребенка, он справляется с ней
> непосредственным или примитивным способом.
> В этих случаях структура его
> поведения совершенно напоминает схему,
> нарисованную Фолькельтом.
>
> (Russian
>
> Collected Works, p. 117).
>
> This means (as nearly as I can make out):
> "If the task did not go beyond
> the natural capability of the child, he
> could deal with it in an
>
> unmediated
>
> or primitive method. In this cases, the
> structure of his behavior would
>
> be
>
> completely similar to the scheme as
> presented by Volkelt".
>
> I think there is no diagramme, at least
> not in the sense of a two
> dimensional graphic one can have a copy
> of. What Vygotsky is referring to
> is Volkelt's attempt to explain all child
> behavior as the result of an
> affectively tinged FUSION of perception
> and behavior, an affectively
> colored, unanalyzable, whole in which
> perception and behavior were
> absolutely inseparable. This was what Hans
> Volkelt concluded from a
>
> series
>
> of experiments that Vygotsky refers to
> repeatedly, both in HDHMF and in
>
> the
>
> Lectures on Pedology and elswhere.
>
> What Volkelt did was this: he had four
> baby bottles: one shaped like a
> triangle, one like a violin, one like a
> square, etc. They were all
> different colors as well. But three of
> them didn't have holes in the
>
> teat:
>
> you could see and smell the milk but you
> couldn't drink it. One did. He
> taught the infants to associate the
> drinking of milk and the feeling of
> satiation with one particular bottle, so
> that they would actually ignore
> the bottle unless it had all the
> characteristics: triangularity,
>
> blueness,
>
> etc. So Volkelt argued that from the
> child's point of view, he was not
> drinking milk but triangular blue milk.
> This kind of "affectively colored
> whole" is what Vygotsky refers to as
> "Volkelt's scheme", or "Volkelt's
> schemata".
>
> Volkelt's scheme came to a bad end. He
> eventually decided that we never
> grow out of unanalyzable affectively
> colored perception-behavior wholes,
> and this would explain the indivisible and
> inseparable devotion of the
> German volk to their Fuhrer. So in later
> work Vygotsky is very careful to
> distance himself from Volkelt even in his
> explanations of infant
>
> behavior:
>
> in the Lectures on Pedology he argues that
> ALL THREE layers of behavior
> (that is, instinct, habit, and
> intelligence) are present in infancy.
>
> David Kellogg
> Macquarie University
>
>
>
> On Sat, Jan 9, 2016 at 10:50 PM, Huw Lloyd
> <huw.softdesigns@gmail.com
> <mailto:huw.softdesigns@gmail.com>>
> wrote:
>
> Does anyone have a copy of "Volkelt's
> diagram" to hand that is referred
>
> to
>
> in The History of the Development of
> Higher Mental Functions (1997,
>
> p.85
>
> and onwards in ch. 4)? I don't think
> a reference is given.
>
> Best,
> Huw
>
>
>
>
>
> --
>
> It is the dilemma of psychology to deal as a natural
> science with an
> object that creates history. Ernst Boesch
>
>
>
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