Steve,
I did my best to find a solution of the riddle with interrupted
sentence. Alas, I failed :-).
I think the best is to delete this semisentence.
As for Alexander Meshcheriskov's theoretic ideas it’s in the same time
easy and difficult to discuss them. Easy because the core result of
Meshcheriakov’s practice with deaf-blind children was absolutely
clear: the human consciousness is based on collaborative object
oriented activity mediated with cultural tools, while the latter are
first of all tangible implements of human way of life and last of all
arbitrary signs. Strictly to say this conclusion doesn’t contradict to
Vygotsky’s scientific data. In “Tool and symbol in child development”
he admits
“We can think of nothing more obviously underlining the fact that at
the very beginning of speech the child sees no connection between sign
and meaning, nor does it begin to become conscious of this connection
for quite some time.”
In fact these words contain involuntary admission of an error in his
own idea about arbitrary signs as basis of human consciousness (“high
mental functions”) at least in dialectical (Marxist) logic.
Surely eclectics allows to aggregate any definitions at any stage of
development and at any stage of analysis, say to start from object
oriented activity (while one can clearly see that the child (or
“primitive”) in Vygotsky’s experiment, refusing participate in these
strange games with arbitrary renaming, acts as object oriented
subject) than to add “socialness”, than to add “subjectness”, than to
add arbitrary signs and a bit of magic and after all this operations
pretend on “theoretic” position. On the contrary the dialectical logic
insists on the necessity of theoretical deduction of all developed
forms from the initial cell, from the most abstract relation. And just
in this point there is a basic distinction between Hegelian and
“nonexistent” Marxist philosophy.
Hegel contents himself with speculative extraction of developing ideas
from his own genial head (in fact from uncritically adopted
contemporary science) while Marx demands to search and to find the way
how ideas (and their objects) develop in the very objective reality.
Actually it means the critical rethinking of all theoretic and
empirical data of predecessors and deliberate research aiming to find
the way the objective reality intends to sublate its contradictions
itself.
Thus both Marx and Hegel endeavoured to overcome the naïve sensualist
approach, the notorious S-->R relation with its lack of real subject.
Marx found the solution in his analysis of human history as the most
developed object and put forward the idea of collaborative practice
revolutionarily transforming the world, while Hegel failed to find
something better that postulating a magic ability of ascribing
arbitrary signs, or die Namengebungkraft. Evidently in this case
Vygotsky went after Hegel, not Marx. That’s why the empiric data which
he as sincere researcher refers to argues against his theoretic
Hegelian style speculations and confirms the opposite, dialectical
approach.
All this is absolutely evident if we are looking from developed
dialectical perspective, looking from Il’enkov’s position. But I am
afraid that it’s rather difficult simply to illustrate the theme with
wide citation from Il’enkov and Meshcheriakov.
You are absolutely right that besides critical one needs a positive
explanation of the subject. I assure you that I’ll be happy to give
such a positive exposition of dialectical psychology approach. Only
one problem still exists in this connection. The format of listserv
post is a little narrow for description of fundamental theory :-)
while my articles used to magically escape the chance to be published
(at least in English).
Cheers,
Sasha
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu]
On Behalf Of Steve Gabosch
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 4:06 PM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] The belated reflections on Anna's and Peter's article
Jan 15
Hi Sasha,
I got your attachment. I notice your earlier part 1 is included in
this one, so your whole new post is in this new MSWord attachment.
I'll be looking over your commentary carefully, lots to think about
and respond to.
I wanted to see if, in the meantime, I could nudge you into writing a
little more about A. Meshcheriakov's theoretical ideas.
I found myself especially struck by your mentioning of Alexander
Meshcheriakov's "great discovery". You say:
" ... by excluding the real tangible tool Vygotsky hermetically closed
the window between the real material world and the so called
subjective reality or consciousness, between material and ideal. The
real (indeed) great discovery of Alexander Meshcheriakov
(theoretically reflected and greeted by Ilyenkov) was experimental
prove of the fact that human consciousness arises **not in senseless
drilling of arbitrary signs** which supposedly gives the deaf and
blind person a chance to access to Divine Word, but the practical
mastering of real tangible and far from any arbitrariness human tools
as say a spoon, as cloths, as a bed, as a chair, as a chamber-pot etc.
In fact this not speculative but founded in the practical reality
statement was nothing but death sentence to Vygotsky’s semiotic
conception. In his epoch-making book “Deaf and blind child”
Meshcheriakov demonstrates how this logic can be observed even in
biography of Helen Keller thou her teacher Ann Sullivan hardly had an
adequate theoretically understanding of the real reasons of her
success."
In your December post, which your new post helps me understand much
better, (thank you), you also briefly discussed Meshcheriakov's ideas.
You said:
"the shift of interest from “bare hand” (in Leont’ev and
Zaporojetz doctrine of perceptive activity) to hand armed with
cultural tool in object oriented activity belongs more to Alexander
Meshcheriakov and Il’enkov than to Leont’ev"
And you contrasted Meshcheriakov's central unit of analysis,
"Collaborative object oriented activity of minimum two persons
mediated by cultural tool (not mere sign!)" with the "Vygotskyian
triangle of sign mediation" and Leontiev's "Subject and Object, or
vial relation."
I was wondering, Sasha, while you are waiting for me to respond, if
you would be willing to expand on your reading of Meshcheriakov and
Ilyenkov in terms of the core psychological ideas you are advocating.
After all, in the long run, it is not what you are against and
critical of that counts most - it is what you are **for**. :-))
Best,
- Steve
PS This is a question to Sasha about an incomplete sentence that is
at the end of the below paragraph: "Surely all this can be correct but
to ..."
Is there more? Or did your word processor leave in something not
meant ...
"May I ask you Steve why you are “especially unwilling to have to
choose between” lines of theorizing of Vygotsky and Leont’ev? Are
you equally unwilling to have to choose between lines of theorizing of
say Kant and Hegel, or Hegel and Marx? Or in the last case you realize
that such refusal to choose between two lines will be inadequate
because one can’t merge the subjective idealism of Kant with
objective one of Hegel, and objective idealism of Hegel with
materialism of Marx without flagrant eclecticism. Do you realize that
your refusal to choose between semiotics of Vygotsky and object
oriented activity of Leont’ev means the refusal in appreciation the
Leont’ev’s theorizing as a new theoretic step in the development of
the Vygotsky’s theoretic school and appreciating of the Vygotsky’s
school as developing one? In fact you say that all basic ideas were
formulated by Vygotsky in his twenties while Leont’ev had to define
more exactly some non-essential details and that both Vygotsky and
Leont’ev were totally mistaken supposing that the contradiction
between their approach were and remain principle. Surely all this can
be correct but to"
If research proves that the oxygen theory of burning is truer that
“phlogiston” one, we as researchers have to choose one definite
position. And that is not a peculiarity of chemistry as natural
science, or national feature of these pugnacious Russians but the
universal principal of dialectical (=scientific, =научного)
thinking.
On Jan 14, 2009, at 12:04 PM, Alexander Surmava wrote:
Hi everybody,
in reply to Steve's comments on my long post I'm sending even longer
one.
I did my best to be more compact. Alas, I failed.
As previously I'm sending the post in attached file in MSWord to
save all
formatting.
(My text is marked With dark red letters. Steve's text marked in
yellow on
green field.)
Sasha
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-
bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] On
Behalf Of Mike Cole
Sent: Friday, January 02, 2009 7:44 PM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] The belated reflections on Anna's and Peter's
article
Along with others, thanks for your thoughtful summarizing and
commentary
on Sasha's long note, Steve. To me, the basic idea behind chat as a
framework (sometimes elevated in particular work to the status of a
theoretical
heuristic, perhaps even a theory) is captured by the following
statement in
Steve's note which, I believe, reflects the views of Peter and Anna
as well.
These two lines of thinking about tools and signs could be seen as
two sides
of the same coin, the same essential process, which may be better
understood
now that we have the theory of ideality/materiality to work with,
(which, as
I mentioned, I believe is an advance over the older "sign/tool"
framework
Vygotsky employed). The discovery by Ilyenkov that all cultural
artifacts,
including internal psychological processes, "contain" (metaphorically
speaking) both ideality and materiality offers new ways to assess
earlier
efforts to describe and explain mediation.
mikr
On Wed, Dec 31, 2008 at 5:17 AM, Steve Gabosch <
<mailto:stevegabosch@me.com> stevegabosch@me.com>
wrote:
Yikes! I did not realize I managed to send out two earlier
versions of
what I was putting together. The last one is the one most worked on.
Please ignore the first two. Hopefully they don't have something
embarrassing!
Thanks for your response, Sasha. Looking forward to hearing more
from
you!
Happy New Year to all from me as well,
- Steve
On Dec 30, 2008, at 4:50 PM, Alexander Surmava wrote:
Thank you Steve,
your summery of my text is absolutely adequate and your comments
are
inspiring to detailed answer.
I try to write it as soon as possible, but...
In new year :-)
Thank you again
And A Happy New Year to all XMCA'ers!!!
Sasha
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu
] On
Behalf Of Steve Gabosch
Sent: Wednesday, December 31, 2008 2:19 AM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] The belated reflections on Anna's and Peter's
article
I found myself taking a close look at Sasha's Dec 28 post, and wound
up writing a summary of major points and quotes from his post to
sort
them out for myself. Others may or may not find this summary
helpful.
Some comments follow.
1. Sasha suggests that Anna and Peter take a cavalier and eclectic
methodological approach toward sociology.
Combining CHAT with "one or various types of sociology, based on
absolutely different philosophical backgrounds … demonstrates," in
Sasha's opinion, "some methodological unconcern."
2. Sasha's main concern in this post/commentary is not over CHAT and
sociology, however. It is over the relationship of Vygotsky and
Leontiev. He sees Peter and Anna's "eclecticism" toward various
trends in sociology as being akin to what he sees as an eclecticism
toward CHAT theory itself, which arbitrarily and incorrectly
combines
Vygotsky and Leontiev.
Sasha remarks that "eclecticism blossoms in the discussed text much
earlier than [when] the authors try to act as matchmakers between
psychology and sociology."
"The very notion of so called Cultural Historical Activity Theory,
or
CHAT," according to Sasha, amounts to little more than "several
arbitrarily taken out of context separate ideas of Vygotsky and
Leont'ev."
"Even more naïve," he comments further, is the "attempt to put
forward
the distinction between "the first", "the second" and the "third"
generations" of what he sees as a "nonexistent theory."
He acknowledges that "we use the term CHAT" as a way "to designate"
the tradition "rooted in Vygotsky and Leont'ev tradition," but Sasha
emphasizes that "I'm afraid that it looks rather naïve to take it
literally as THEORY."
3. Sasha asks "we have to put before ourselves the real question:
what, if anything, unifies psychological ideas of Leont'ev and
Vygotsky?"
Sasha says with emphasis: "Near to nothing."
4. Sasha acknowledges that both LSV and ANL were Marxists, but
dismisses Marxism as being a point in common between Vygotsky and
Leontiev **as psychologists.**
He explains: "One can find a lot of common motives, common ideas and
even the same words in both LSV and ANL. These common motives and
words are nothing but their common Marxist background, their Marxist
theoretic culture. And we will be the last who will deny or
underestimate this common cultural-historical root of both thinkers.
But the question was about their similarity as psychologists, not as
private persons with similar political and philosophical
weltanschauung [sg - world view]."
5. Sasha emphasizes they were Marxists, and furthermore, did not
make
concessions to what some would call Stalinism.
"Did [these] two researchers, or even one of them, part from their
common Marxist general philosophical and social position?
"Surely not!
"Both remain sincere and passionate Marxists and communists.
"Did one of them accept or slightly move closer to Soviet official
quasi Marxist ideology?
"Surely not, as well!"
6. However, Sasha emphasizes, one cannot agree with both Vygotsky
and
Leontiev.
"… if one of them was right, the other inevitably was wrong."
7. Sasha summarizes their basic theoretical positions in this way:
"As we know the basic theoretic idea of LSV was the idea of sign
mediation. He really believed that "cultural" (arbitrary) sign can
bridge the gap between two Cartesian substances."
On the other hand, "ANL didn't believe that [the] arbitrary sign can
help to solve [the] old psycho physical problem, and shift[ed] his
attention as a researcher from "cultural" sign to object oriented
activity."
As Sasha sees it, "Here, just in this point the ways of Vygotsky and
Leont'ev as psychologists divaricated. Leont'ev focused his
attention
on activity as a means which can mediate a subject and his object,
while Vygotsky stayed on his old semiotic position."
8. Sasha raises objections to points Peter and Anna raise about
"transformative change" being a theme in first but not second
generation CHAT. He uses this as a touchstone to a major point he
stresses - Vygotsky's theory of sign mediation cannot play a role in
the emancipation (transformative change) of the wage worker.
Sasha says he "can hardly imagine how a sign can change anything
both
in the real world and in the individual consciousness at least from
Marxist perspective."
9. Sasha analyzes the plight of the wage worker to illustrate this.
"When a worker is self-employed say in subsistence production or in
creative work he acts as living object oriented and consequently
spontaneous creature. On the contrary, when a human sells his labor
power he alienates first of all his/her spontaneity."
" … as wage hand he needs to be specially stimulated to make any
movement."
" … the wage worker turns into Cartesian dead, mechanical SèR
machine
in the very capitalist reality."
"… a worker is totally enslaved and the task of communist
revolution
is to destroy this relation which turns an alive human into dead
SèR
machine.
10. Sasha describes the alienation of the worker both in capitalism
and in the Soviet Union.
" … the method of double stimulation (the notorious triangle) was
the
basic method of "emancipation" of alienated labour in the Soviet
Union
…"
"… the basis of relation of wage labour lies naked S=>R relation
…"
11. Sasha emphasizes that "signs" cannot liberate the worker, only
the elimination of wage labor itself can do this.
"… to mask this unattractive picture [wage slavery] capitalists
decorate the chain with paper flowers of every sort and kind of
"cultural" signs. The premise of this practice is an idea that
totally alienated wage worker will forget about his slave status and
imagine that he is free looking at false ideological quasi communist
or equally false ideological religious or liberal signs or slogans
hanging on the walls of his workshop or transmitting via mass media.
"… the way to the realm of freedom has nothing to do with so
called
"sign mediation".
"The fact is that we don't need false even highly "cultural"
decorations of the chain, we need to destroy the chains of wage
labour
as it is."
12. Better suited to this task is the theory of object oriented
activity than semiotic mediation.
"And the theory of object oriented (not alienated) activity in its
more developed variant as theory of dialectical psychology is more
suitable instrument for this task than all kinds of semiotic
conceptions with all kind of false artificial signs."
13. The suggestion that Leontiev's theorizing was connected to
Stalinism is unfounded.
"Surely Leont'ev (and Il'enkov) lived in more hard times than
Vygotsky, but that circumstance doesn't give us a right to insult
them
with unfounded inferences that his theoretic position has
something to
do with the Soviet totalitarianism."
14. At the same time, while LSV's theory of semiotic mediation was
objectively reactionary, Sasha emphasizes that he is not accusing
him
of being a political reactionary.
"To prevent any misunderstanding we want emphasize that criticizing
semiotic approach as objectively reactionary one we are far from
accusing Lev Semionovich in any political sins."
"That is not his fault that the first outline of Marxist psychology
wasn't entirely successful."
"Even less we imply that Soviet authorities were in the list [in the
past? sg] guided by Vygotsky's semiotic ideas, because similar
more or
less articulated ideas were and still remain in the air."
15. As an aside, Sasha discusses the way Anna translates a passage
from Vygotsky in a 2004 article. I will skip that.
16. Sasha then moves on to describe the crux of his critique of
Leontiev. He points out that Leontiev's theory of perception is
indicative of what is wrong with his theory in general.
" … Leont'ev knew and insisted on social character of human
activity,
but he failed in substantial psychological realization of this
principle."
" … activity in Leont'ev's theory is an activity of isolated
person or
animal, a variant of Robinsonade. That comes home if we take for
example his and Zaporojets' conception of perceptive activity."
" … both researchers analyzed the movement of eyes or hands of
isolated person in total abstraction from any social relation and
from
any tangible tool, taking it in terms of Francis Bacon "with bare
hand".
17. Understanding the role of the human-created tool is crucial,
something Leontiev did not understand.
"In fact the omission of tool in the schema of human object oriented
activity is equal to omission of social context of this activity
because the attributive characteristic of human activity is that it
has to be armed with a tool given to him by another human."
"Many of animals can make and utilize various tools. Only humans
make
tools not for themselves, but for others, only humans don't throw
out
their tools after utilizing them, only humans teach their kids to
use
this tools, only humans collect tools as tangible part of their
culture, only humans acquire an ability to deal with ideal meanings
embodies in those tools."
18. Leontiev's lack of understanding on the question of the human-
made tool means he cannot be credited with solving this crucial
problem in object oriented activity theory.
"Evidently that the shift of interest from "bare hand" (in Leont'ev
and Zaporojetz doctrine of perceptive activity) to hand armed with
cultural tool in object oriented activity belongs more to Alexander
Meshcheriakov and Il'enkov than to Leont'ev."
19. Continuing his critique of Leontiev, Sasha explains that ANL's
failure to understand the psychological nature of the cultural tool
paralleled Leontiev's failure to theorize the psyche. Sasha
refers to
sharp though friendly-in-form criticisms Leontiev made of Vygotsky
semiotic approach, but points out that Leontiev did not himself
surmount that "vulgar and evidently non-Marxist" semiotic approach
himself.
"In the same time he [Leontiev] totally failed in his attempt to
give
a theoretic deduction of psyche."
"In fact defining a psyche as an ability which emerges in the
situation when a (magically arise from nowhere) "subject" starts to
react on abiotic stimuli which acquires a meaning of sign which
indicates the presence of some biotic stimuli Leont'ev
unintentionally
returned to the same vulgar and evidently non Marxist semiotic
approach which he sharply (though friendly in form) criticized in
Vygotsky."
20. Nevertheless, Sasha argues that Leontiev did make a fundamental
contribution, despite these other failures.
"What Alexei Nikolaevitch really did was the discovery of the
essence
of life as it is (which in fact is nothing but an object oriented
activity) … though Leont'ev himself didn't guess what was the real
subject of his really great discovery.
21. The final part of Sasha's commentary is a table comparing the
three trends of psychological theorizing represented by Vygotsky,
Leontiev, and Ilyenkov/A. Meshchariakov. He lists the authors and
names of the three theoretical trends, and compares them along three
criteria: their units of analysis, whether they solved the "essence
of life" question, and whether they solved what might be called the
"human tool sharing in culture and history" problem.
Vygotsky's theory, "Cultural-Historical theory," using the
Vygotskian
triangle of sign mediation as its unit of analysis, did not solve
either problem.
Leontiev's theory, "Theory of Activity," using the Subject and
Obect,
or vital relation as its unit of analysis, solved the essence of
life
problem (activity is object-oriented), but not the human tool
sharing
in culture and history problem (human psychology is based on the use
of shared tools in human activity).
Ilyenkov/Meshchariakov's theory, "Dialectical Psychology," or what
Sasha says can be called simply CHAT, uses as its unit of analysis
"collaborative object oriented activity of minimum two persons
mediated by cultural tool (not mere sign!)" and successfully solves
both problems.
22. As part of his presentation of this table, Sasha comments on
Vygotsky. He is critical of Vygotsky's SèR schema, his triangle of
mediation, as being mechanical. He rejects the idea that culture
and
history can be found in this scheme with arbitrary [conventional]
signs. He also suggests that culture and history cannot be found in
the "artificial concepts" theorized in the Sakharov-Vygotsky
experiment.
Vygotsky "tried to deal with stimulus reactive creatures as a
starting
point of his theorizing (e.g. in the basis of his triangle of
mediation), while the SèR schema is totally mechanical principle
which
has nothing to do even with alive subjects not to speak of
subjects of
psyche or human consciousness …"
"Culture is something that is growing and crystallizing and passing
from one alive hands to another one for ages and that has little
to do
with taken by agreement arbitrary signs."
" … in the scheme of mediation with arbitrary signs we can find no
more "culture and history" than in Sakharov-Vygotsky experiment with
so called "artificial concepts"."
23. At the same time, before he closes, Sasha feels strongly
obliged
to point out Vygotsky's vital contributions.
"I feel that I can't put a dot without appreciating Vygotsky's
contribution to CHAT …"
There is no question that "Vygotsky's role in foundation of CHAT
as a
researching school can't be underestimated."
"It was Vygotsky who clearly formulated the criteria of scientific
character of our discipline: "Donauchn. t.zr. —
vzaimodeistv." (prescientific point of view – interaction <of
soul and
body – A.S.>)."
"It was Vygotsky who said: "Centr. problema vsei psihologii –
svoboda." (The core problem of entire psychology is freedom)"
"… and this: "Grandioznaya kartina razvitiya lichnosti: put' k
svobode. Ojivit' spinozizm v Marks. psihol." (The grandiose
picture of
personality development: the way to freedom. Revive Spinozism in
Marxist psychology.)
"We can continue the list of such brilliant insights."
24. Sasha finishes off with a big nod to the contributions of
Leontiev and others.
"But probably his [Vygotsky's] biggest scientific result was
inducing
the field of greatest voltage around himself as a researcher, the
field that attracted and inspired such brilliant thinkers as Luria
and
Zaporojets, as Elkonin and Leont'ev and many many others.
And among these, " … first of all Alexei Leont'ev, who not only
continue[d the] Vygotsky's project, but make [made] fundamentally
new
step[s] in the development of CHAT psychology."
25. And a final comment by Sasha to return to the general
discussion
thread:
"To summarize my feelings from Anna's and Peter's article I can
repeat
that it touches essentially actual problems and just therefore it
must
be appreciated as a starting point of big discussion concerning
social
dimensions of CHAT psychology."
COMMENTS by Steve:
I appreciate Sasha's contribution and criticisms. He raises
important
issues for CHAT about how to understand Vygotsky, Leontiev and
Ilyenkov's theories, and use them as a basis to move forward. I
find
myself having a few critical remarks on Sasha's commentary.
I don't agree that Vygotsky and Leontiev had "near to nothing" in
common in their psychological theorizing, and I am especially
unwilling to have to choose between their two lines of
theorizing. I
believe the two can be highly integrated, even more so than has been
done, at least in English, so far. (Obviously, that belief needs to
be put into practice!)
On Sasha's critique of the theory of sign mediation, I do not
recognize Vygotsky's actual theory in his commentary. I am also
quite
uncomfortable using this theory as representative of Vygotsky's
overall theorizing. I think it misses out on the strong Marxist
approach Vygotsky worked with.
I applaud Sasha's call for emancipation from wage labor and
alienated
work conditions, but I do not believe Vygotsky was talking about
political signs adulating capitalist industrial practices when he
talked about psychological signs, as Sasha seems to interpreting the
theory of sign mediation to be about. Perhaps I am misreading
Sasha.
To understand his critique, I would have to ask Sasha to point to
actual things Vygotsky wrote.
On his example of wage labor, I question the one-sided way it seems
that Sasha suggests that at "the basis of relation[s] of wage labour
lies naked S=>R relations." It is certainly true that social
relations and physical conditions can deteriorate to terrible lows
in
capitalist industry, but humans, except in the most extreme
conditions, are rarely fully divested of their upper mental
functions
and reduced to just animal reactions, naked S=>R relations. When
this
happens, of course, humans can't work. Not that one doesn't feel
like
that at the end of the work day sometimes! Such a situation could
indeed happen in a concentration camp, conditions of prison torture,
etc., where people can truly "lose their minds" for the moment,
maybe
for a while. But it is precisely the (contradictory) meditational
aspects of human psychology and social reality that makes it
possible
for workers and anyone to be human – not to mention up for and
fight
for their humanity - isn't it? It is that mediational element
between
the Stimulus and the Response that gives us the power to be human,
and
even the power just to do even menial work. The capitalists
impose a
mode of production that seeks to completely ignore this mediational
element it - but at their peril. In reality, compromises are worked
out on shop floors and all workplaces day by day, minute by minute.
Workers can get treated like semi-animals (with language and
skills!),
but they don't become animals.
When Marx talked about the task of the emancipation of workers being
the task of the workers themselves, I think he was talking about
taking our humanity (despite the capitalist's exploitation of it) on
the job and generalizing that toward creating a new kind of society.
The first step is to see the humanity that does exist in the work
process, including the capitalist work process. Sasha's
descriptions
seem to lose sight of that first step.
I believe that Ilyenkov's theory of the ideal solves important
problems with the instrumental level of analysis Vygotsky was
using to
distinguish tools and signs, and to understand and describe the
fundamentally meditational character of human upper mental
functions.
The theory of the ideal in my opinion is still only tentatively
being
integrated into CHAT – it has important contributions still to
make.
Similarly, Leontiev's theory of object-oriented activity solves some
very important limitations that first generation CHAT was facing
trying to analyze the complex subject-object relations that
psychology
must address. This theory is also only tentatively accepted and
integrated into mainstream CHAT today. Some question whether it
even
belongs in CHAT.
As for the history of CHAT, rather than draw a picture of
reactionary
errors and complete failures, as Sasha seems to (and others
sometimes
do, too), I prefer viewing these theoretical developments a little
less dramatically and more cerebrally, in terms of lines of
development, obstacles, wrong directions, and new leaps. Sasha
takes
pains to emphasize the good intentions of both Vygotsky and
Leontiev.
I see no reason not to maintain this spirit in our historical
analyses
of both their accomplishments and their shortcomings, and those of
others in the CHAT tradition. Even in errors are important seeds of
progress, which should not be lost sight of. Phraseology like
"reactionary" and "totally failed" creates a one-sided view of
serious
work that can obscure vision of actual development. An effective
dialectical criticism needs above all to show where things are
going,
not just where they have stalled.
Sasha's criticism of Leontiev on viewing activity and perception
only
in terms of the "bare-handed" individual is interesting. For me,
specific passages where Leontiev does this are needed for me to
understand this criticism. As for the ideas about the shared
cultural
tool Sasha attributes to Ilyenkov and A. Meshcheriakov, these ideas
certainly seem worth explaining and having appropriate writings on
this referred to.
Finally, Sasha's table offers an interesting look at how he sees
CHAT
as developing. Despite his sharp rhetoric and negative assessments
about Vygotsky and Leontiev, when all is said and done, I don't see
the sense of the direction of CHAT as radically different from most
others in CHAT, at least judging from this commentary.
I see a lot of work still laying ahead of us in the CHAT world just
grasping what Vygotsky, Leontiev and Ilyenkov said, and putting it
together into an integrated theory of psychology – or rather,
part of
the basis for such a theory. These three writers of course are only
the top of a pyramid of researchers, philosophers, sociologists,
psychologists, thinkers that need to be critiqued and integrated.
Underlying all this effort is the desire and hope for a new kind of
psychology – which is what Vygotsky called for, and I think in
one way
or another, unites us.
I hope Sasha continues to share the work he and his colleagues have
been doing. If he has a chance to elaborate on some of his specific
readings of Vygotsky and Leontiev and others, all the better.
- Steve
On Dec 28, 2008, at 7:06 PM, Alexander Surmava wrote:
Dear XMCA'ers,
Because the text with my reflections contains a table and some
other
difficult for reproduction in "plain text" formatting I attach the
MSWord
file to this post.
Cheers,
Sasha
<About Anna's and Peter's
article.doc>_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
<Reply to Steve.doc>_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
<mailto:xmca@weber.ucsd.edu> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
<http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca>
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca