Re: [xmca] Vygotsky's historicism

From: Victor <victor who-is-at kfar-hanassi.org.il>
Date: Mon Apr 07 2008 - 21:59:50 PDT

> Not all dichotomies are equally sinful.

Indeed, no dichotomy is sinful, only relevant or irrelevant.

>>I would like to contest the biological/(cultural!!)/psychological
>>boundary.
>>The loooooooooooooooong
>>coevolution of phylogeny and culture really argue against a clear boundary
>>between the psychological and the biological.
>>
>>No?

If Mike's contesting the biological/(cultural!) psychological boundary is
universal, i.e. concerned with the evolution of all culture and phylogeny;
then I cannot but agree.
After all, phylogeny is entirely dependent upon the conditions of existence,
and culture, particularly human culture, is a major condition of existence
for man as well as for most of his coinhabitants on the planet.

Mike, if you or I were to drink a gallon of arsenic, the human species would
probably lose our contribution to its gene pool, but if drinking arsenic
became a regular practice at cocktail parties, some of the drinkers might
well be more resistant than others to the deleterious effects of arsenic,
hence they would more likely survive to reproduce arsenic tolerant progeny
than the other more arsenic sensitive drinkers. After all, we acquire our
bodies as well as our practices (psyches, if you will) from others.

Victor Friedlander:
victor@kfar-hanassi.org.il

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andy Blunden" <ablunden@mira.net>
To: <mcole@weber.ucsd.edu>; "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity"
<xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2008 6:20
Subject: Re: [xmca] Vygotsky's historicism

>I accepted that formulation of Steve's Mike, because I think it is
>important to distinguish between the problems posed by pairs of things
>which interact with each other, and are just in that sense "inseparable",
>things which merge, interpenetrate and mutually determine one another and
>cannot be sharply demarcated from one another, and pairs of things which
>are "two sides of a coins", which mutually constitute one another and are
>quite simply senseless and inconceivable separately from one another, like
>North and South.
>
> In terms of the inside/outside dichotomy I think we must say plainly that
> "yes," the biological organism is "under the skin", ... but there are not
> ideas or mental objects "under the skin." The biological organism is not a
> "container" of ideas; bodies have brains but they do not have ideas.
> Asking where this organism comes from, how did it come about, does it have
> an ontogenesis or phylogensis which is nothing but organism, obviously
> "no." But that kind of inseparability does not cancel the fact that a
> gallon of arsenic does not poison me if it is in the bottle, but it does
> if I swallow it. Not a trivial distinction.
>
> It is true that the Hegel/Marx/Vygotsky tradition also importantly
> deconstructed any sharp division between mental and material, between
> thoughts and actions, and as you say, between the psychological and the
> biological. But to recognise that there is a boundary at the skin for
> biology does not contradict this. Psychology is not the study of ideas as
> entities residing inside the organism, even if some people think it is.
> Biology is a study of the organism though.
>
> The idea of a chronological disjunction between cultural and biological
> development is another question altogether. I think that if we were to
> reason, "phylogeny (development of the organism itself) is inseparable
> from objective cultural practice (development of artefacts outside the
> organism), therefore you can't draw a sharp line between inside and
> outside" that would be monstrously confusing.
>
> Not all dichotomies are equally sinful.
>
> Andy
>
>
>
> At 07:41 PM 7/04/2008 -0700, you wrote:
>>Steve--
>>
>>You write in part: One thing that makes the Hegel/Marx/Vygotsky etc.
>>intellectual lineage so different from the plain materialist/idealist
>>mainstream is it recognizes the biological, but flatly denies the
>>psychological existence of this boundary
>>
>>I would like to contest the biological/(cultural!!)/psychological
>>boundary.
>>The loooooooooooooooong
>>coevolution of phylogeny and culture really argue against a clear boundary
>>between the psychological and the biological.
>>
>>No?
>>mike
>>
>>On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 3:20 PM, Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net> wrote:
>>
>> > All well said Steve.
>> > I too have difficulty with how to consistently use scientific,
>> > dialectical
>> > concepts while living with the fact of socially dominant Cartesian
>> concepts.
>> > The idea of millions of private mental worlds located inside people's
>> heads,
>> > made up of thought-objects called abstract ideals counterposed to an
>> > objective reality of things is not just "wrong" and something we should
>> > oppose, but also a social fact (i.e., most believe believe in this and
>> > act
>> > accordingly) which we have to describe, analyse and transform.
>> >
>> > Andy
>> >
>> > At 05:37 PM 7/04/2008 -0400, you wrote:
>> >
>> > > Andy, your comments on three very central theoretical but very
>> > > difficult concept pairs, ideal/material, subjective/objective, and
>> > > abstract/concrete are interesting, and thought-provoking as always.
>> > > Your point about what people generally take to be "ideal," and also,
>> > > may I add, "subjective" and "abstract," is a good one, and triggers a
>> > > little comment here from me.
>> > >
>> > > Ilyenkov emphasizes this point in his essay The Concept of the Ideal:
>> > > plain, everyday (he says vulgar) versions of materialism AND idealism
>> > > both agree that there is a universal boundary between what is
>> > > "inside"
>> > > and "outside" the individual human head. I find that to be a very
>> > > helpful insight. It helps me to see how many contentious,
>> > > winner-take-
>> > > all-style debates between these plain versions of materialism and
>> > > idealism over questions like what causes what (e.g. when does being
>> > > determine consciousness and vice versa), how do the natural and the
>> > > supernatural (if such exists) are at the same time NOT about the
>> > > existence of this universal boundary, which is taken for granted.
>> > > One
>> > > thing that makes the Hegel/Marx/Vygotsky etc. intellectual lineage so
>> > > different from the plain materialist/idealist mainstream is it
>> > > recognizes the biological, but flatly denies the psychological
>> > > existence of this boundary, relating and locating the ideal and
>> > > material, subjective and objective, and abstract and concrete very
>> > > differently, stretching the meanings of these concepts well past what
>> > > they normally refer to. I find it takes concentration and
>> > > deliberation to think this way, constantly having to reapply it anew
>> > > and figure it out all over again as I go. In everyday usage
>> > > especially I find it hard to not use these words in the "vulgar" way
>> > > to refer to one side or the other of this plainspeak Ultimate Divide.
>> > > I find myself contrasting, for example, an ideal job with a real one,
>> > > talking about one opinion being more "subjective" while another more
>> > > "objective," speaking of "abstract" thoughts versus "concrete"
>> > > actions, etc. I think that a close look at these kinds of everyday
>> > > uses reveals a straightforward, mechanical reference to that Ultimate
>> > > Divide, the one DesCartes codified so well. It is almost as though
>> > > our grammar, number system, logic and vocabulary - nearly every
>> > > everyday tool we have to think with - are collectively based on a
>> > > coordinate system that zeroes out at that Ultimate Divide,
>> > > referencing
>> > > to that place where our "head" ends and the "world" begins, to that
>> > > great dividing line that figures in so ubiquitously in so many modern
>> > > cultures and ideologies. To flip that reference system entirely over
>> > > and make our starting point something radically different - our
>> > > interpenetrating social relationships - and the zig-zaggy historical
>> > > development of those relationships - in short, activity - is an
>> > > enormous paradigm shift, and one that seems to take constant,
>> > > rigorous
>> > > theoretical focus in order to to speak clearly in terms of. In
>> > > trying
>> > > to be rigorous, in making the point you make below that it is the
>> > > existence of the ideal that distinguishes an artifact from raw
>> > > nature,
>> > > I might say that the "ideal" is *necessarily always* material, as in
>> > > inseparable from it, not just something that can "also be" material.
>> > > But I am always walking on eggshells a little when I try to speak at
>> > > that level. I enjoy trying, and do so here on xmca from time to
>> > > time,
>> > > but by no means do I always get it right.
>> > >
>> > > - Steve
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > On Apr 6, 2008, at 6:30 PM, Andy Blunden wrote:
>> > >
>> > > >
>> > > > I think part of the difficulty with getting people to accept that
>> > > > unity of material and ideal is that people generally take ideal to
>> > > > be almost synonymous with "subjective" or "in consciousness"
>> > > > whereas
>> > > > "material" simply means "outside of and independent of
>> > > > consciousness". For us, however, "ideal" can also be material,
>> > > > distinguishing what is artifact from what is nature.
>> > > >
>> > >
>> > > On Apr 6, 2008, at 10:07 PM, Andy Blunden wrote:
>> > > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > <snip>
>> > >
>> > > > 1. The contrast of ideal to material is simply a mistaken one. It
>> > > > does not help at all.
>> > > > <snip>
>> > > > 3. The abstract/concrete relation is a different contrast again, a
>> > > > very important one but a different issue altogether from the
>> > > > problem
>> > > > of the ideal.
>> > > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > _______________________________________________
>> > > xmca mailing list
>> > > xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>> > > http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>> > >
>> >
>> > Andy Blunden :
>> http://home.mira.net/~andy/<http://home.mira.net/%7Eandy/>tel (H) +61 3
>> 9380 9435, mobile 0409 358 651
>> >
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > xmca mailing list
>> > xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>> > http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>> >
>>_______________________________________________
>>xmca mailing list
>>xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>>http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>
> Andy Blunden : http://home.mira.net/~andy/ tel (H) +61 3 9380 9435,
> mobile 0409 358 651
>
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