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Re: [xmca] zpd zbr zedpd and zoped



Thanks very much Steve for raising all the questions you do. We all have
such diverse origins that its hard to keep track of when  we are being
obscure. I will try to respond to some of the questions separately. I see
that Anton has contributed on pedology and Andy on UR and Carol introduces
an interesting, possible compatible, way of thinking about UR, as the common
core.

Andy, isnt your -- Isn't your Outlines essay somewhere accessible? That
would help those who share Steve's uncertainties re urphenomenon and
Vygotsky.
mike

On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 3:14 PM, Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net> wrote:

> Ha ha! That's a nice usage, Carol!
> I have no idea how long this adoption of Ur- into English has been going
> on, but it may be wider than I thought.
>
> Andy
>
>
> Carol Macdonald wrote:
>
>> When one of my colleagues discovered some rampant plagiarism in students'
>> essays, he called the core, which was common to them all, the Ur-essay.
>> Carol
>>
>> On 6 January 2011 18:23, Steve Gabosch <stevegabosch@me.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> Yes, very helpful, Andy.  Interesting neologism, "Urunit."  Your
>>> explanation gives me an intuitive sense, a place to start - and some more
>>> questions.
>>>
>>> Google translates 'Urphaenomen' as 'primary phenomenon' while Babel
>>> translates it as 'elemental phenomenon'.  One translation could be seen
>>> as
>>> more of a time concept, and the other, spatial, or as you suggest,
>>> cellular.
>>>
>>> A little more googling finds 'Ur-' as possibly meaning a number of
>>> closely
>>> related concepts, both in terms of 'essential units', and also in terms
>>> of
>>> 'genesis'.  A list of English substitutes for the German 'Ur-' includes
>>> the
>>> ones you mention, original and prototypical, and a few others: primary,
>>> elemental, ancient, fore-, primal, greatgrand-, primitive, primeval,
>>> proto-,
>>> and archetypal, in a quick search.
>>>
>>> These kinds of meanings makes this term especially interesting to use in
>>> the dialectical senses you and Mike are giving it.  The mixture of the
>>> simultaneous senses of time and space gives the impression the word has
>>> had
>>> a contradictory evolution.  Ur was also an ancient city in Mesopotamia,
>>> one
>>> of the oldest, became a world famous archeological dig, and is likely the
>>> birthplace of Abraham.  A lot seems to be packed into that two-letter
>>> German
>>> prefix and its history!
>>>
>>> Did Marx, Engels or Hegel use the prefix 'Ur-' in a significant way?
>>>
>>> And who (if anyone knows) introduced terms such as "ur characteristic"
>>> and
>>> "ur model" into English?  What meanings are generally being given to
>>> these
>>> terms?
>>>
>>> - Steve
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Jan 6, 2011, at 1:12 AM, Andy Blunden wrote:
>>>
>>> I'll respond to your question about the meaning of "ur," Steve.
>>>
>>>
>>>> "Ur-" is a prefix that is used in German, actually. It has been around
>>>> since the year dot in German, but it has become a bit of a fad recently
>>>> for
>>>> English speakers.
>>>> Ur- is a prefix which means original or prototypical. I mostlly know it
>>>> from Goethe's idea of /Urphaenomen/ which is the original of Vygotsky's
>>>> "unit of analysis", should I say, the Urunit? This is because of
>>>> Goethe/Hegel/Marx/Vygotsky's idea that in order to understand some
>>>> complex
>>>> process as a whole (i.e. a /Gestalt/) then you have to begin with the
>>>> simplest unit of it, it's germ or cell. So the reference is to an
>>>> (artefact-mediated) action as the ur- of psychology and cultivated human
>>>> life.
>>>>
>>>> Does that help, Steve?
>>>>
>>>> Andy
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Steve Gabosch wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> ... "Generalizing Dual Stimulation.
>>>>>
>>>>> * The ur characteristic of higher psychologically (culturally mediated)
>>>>> human action is that it operates indirectly, through the environment.
>>>>> * DS method is the ur model of human action incorporates the
>>>>> environment
>>>>> as tools for action.  But it must be generalized into group as well as
>>>>> individual circumstances."
>>>>>
>>>>> Mike urges the non-Russians at the conference to ask their fellow
>>>>> Russian
>>>>> attendees what 'ur' means.
>>>>>
>>>>> So - to our fellow Russian speakers - what does 'ur' mean in Mike's
>>>>> slide?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
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>>>>
>>>>
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>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
> --
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *Andy Blunden*
> Joint Editor MCA: http://lchc.ucsd.edu/MCA/Journal/
> Home Page: http://home.mira.net/~andy/ <http://home.mira.net/%7Eandy/>
> Videos: http://vimeo.com/user3478333/videos
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