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RE: [xmca] Culture & Rationality
- To: "ablunden@mira.net" <ablunden@mira.net>, "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
- Subject: RE: [xmca] Culture & Rationality
- From: Peter Smagorinsky <smago@uga.edu>
- Date: Fri, 29 Jun 2012 10:18:55 +0000
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- Thread-topic: [xmca] Culture & Rationality
And yet, most of LSV's own examples are biological, no?
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] On Behalf Of Andy Blunden
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 10:54 PM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] Culture & Rationality
Oh, and also, when Vygotsky uses "scientific concepts" as the archetype for a true concept, remember that he *does not* use the concepts of
*natural* science, as Piaget did, but the concepts of Marxist social theory. So, when we are considering Vygotsky's ideas about "scientific concepts" it is probably useful to *not* have in mind concepts like those of physics which Piaget, not Vygotsky, took as ideal types.
Andy
Andy Blunden wrote:
> Stephen Toulmin, in "The Philosophy of Science. An Introduction"
> (1953) I thought definitively proved that the method of reasoning of
> science is not formal logic, or what Toulmin called "syllogistic"
> inference. For example, on p.33: "Certainly none of the substantial
> inferences that one comes across in the phsyical sciences is of a
> syllogistic type. This is because, in the physical sciences, we are
> not seriously interested in enumerating the common properties of sets
> of objects." In other words, the concepts of the physical sciences are
> not pseudoconcepts, therefore we can't use formal logic to makes
> inferences about them. Brandom uses the idea of "formal" and
> "material" inference to make the distinction.
>
> So scientific, and in fact all true, concepts imply going past formal
> logic, which only works with pseudoconcepts.
>
> Andy
>
> Jennifer Vadeboncoeur wrote:
>> Yes, exactly Martin, this work is consistent. I do think Vygotsky
>> privileges dialectical logic over formal logic; by definition, it
>> subsumes formal logic and moves beyond it. From my cultural position,
>> growing up comfortably with formal logic and having to practice
>> thinking dialectically, the above statement doesn't bother me. But I
>> would take a different position relative to an Indigenous
>> perspective, and be much more circumspect about saying that
>> dialectical logic can or should be privileged there. The difference
>> in the two positions is one of power. In the first, it seems that a
>> marginalized position (Marx's in North America) works to challenge a
>> privileged position (formal logic in North America). In the second,
>> privileging a dialectical perspective seems like another act of
>> colonization.
>>
>> If we look equally across these three positions, which is problematic
>> because the is no single homogenous Indigenous perspective, but let's
>> say for this one exercise, then it seems like we are comparing three
>> different cultural, historical perspectives on reasoning, right and
>> logical, or rational,behavior.
>>
>> The question remains to the effects of these different ways of
>> thinking, but for the people thinking within these systems, what is
>> the evidence to show that they cannot think at the adult level of
>> their cultural form of rationality? Yikes, now that I've written
>> this, I'm not even sure it's the question. Is the issue when we try
>> to compare the standards of one cultural group to another?
>>
>> I'll jump to Peter's post, because I totally appreciate what he has
>> written there as well. I appreciate the idea of separating dialogical
>> thinking from scientific ... but I also think of Vera John-Steiner's
>> cognitive pluralism, and want to reaffirm all the other ways of
>> thinking and experiencing the world through image, sound, diagram.
>> These are sometimes more obvious to draw on in some Indigenous
>> cultures, but the move also shifts the discussion from speech to
>> writing, whether we are writing lines, or diagrams, or words.
>>
>> I was looking back over my sad copy of Luria & Vygotsky (1992), the
>> bottom of page 41 through pages 61 are interesting to this topic
>> because they show how much Vygotsky struggled with the necessity of
>> using the work of others and at the same time trying not to be bound
>> by it. He relies on the work of Levy-Bruhl and takes up his language
>> "so-called 'primitive peoples'" and then tries to problematize this a
>> bit. "Primitive man, in the true sense of the term, does not exist
>> anywhere at the present time," but then of course he continues to use
>> this language. He argues against any biological type, discusses
>> "objectively logical thinking" in relation to nature, and goes on to
>> say .... hm, hm, okay, page 59, the focus is on the development of
>> writing, and the transition from natural to cultural memory, and
>> later the historical development of human memory. The ability of sign
>> systems to enable an external form of memory, an external storage of
>> memory.
>>
>> What is different about people with access to the accumulation of
>> cultural knowledge of any particular culture and people of that same
>> culture who do not have access to this accumulated knowledge? In some
>> cultures this may be scientific concepts, as defined by Vygotsky, in
>> other cultures it may be ....?
>>
>> But I keep returning to my post a bit ago, the quote there makes it
>> clear that Vygotsky realizes that even after formal schooling, many
>> people do not think with scientific concepts, and adults do not think
>> with scientific concepts across all domains ... this has been
>> supported by contemporary work, from Panofsky, John-Steiner, &
>> Blackwell (1990) to Howard Gardner's work with Project Zero.
>>
>> Vygotsky's goal of thinking in scientific concepts is actually not
>> accessible to many people within our own cultures ....
>>
>> Okay, have I completely gone overboard? :)
>>
>>
>>
>>> Hi Jennifer,
>>>
>>> Yes, there has been interesting work recently proposing that
>>> indigenous cultures are using a distinct kind of reasoning. These guys:
>>>
>>> Berkes, F., & Berkes, M. K. (2009). Ecological complexity, fuzzy
>>> logic, and holism in indigenous knowledge. Futures, 41(1), 6-12.
>>> doi:10.1016/j.futures.2008.07.003
>>>
>>> ...suggest that indigenous peoples have learned to deal with
>>> complexity, and to manage natural environments rather than master
>>> them; that what has been dismissed as animism is actually a
>>> sophisticated non-dualistic ontology; and that a holistic systems
>>> thinking is being used. I like several aspects of their analysis,
>>> not least that it explains the "simple number system" - one, two,
>>> many - that has been found in many indigenous cultures, as due to an
>>> approach in which people read and interpret signals from the
>>> environment rather than counting and measuring it.
>>>
>>> And I agree with you that judgments of rationality are often violent
>>> impositions; all the judgments of people as 'primitive' are
>>> presumably of this kind. Presumably what we need are non-violent
>>> ways to look at difference.
>>>
>>> As for dialectical logic, it take it that LSV believed that this was
>>> the form of rationality he was employing, and the ontogenesis of
>>> which he was describing. And that he considered it superior to
>>> formal logic, not an alternative.
>>>
>>> Martin
>>>
>>> On Jun 27, 2012, at 2:04 PM, Jennifer Vadeboncoeur wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Hi Martin,
>>>>
>>>> I am thinking about what you wrote,
>>>>
>>>> "On the contrary, it seems to me that much of LSV's writing can be
>>>> read as pointing to the conclusion that *standards* of rationality
>>>> will vary from one culture another. But I don't think he followed
>>>> his own pointers, and, as I've said above, it is a pretty radical
>>>> conclusion to come to."
>>>>
>>>> I was first thinking about different standards of rationality as
>>>> noted in the quote below, between formal and dialectical logic.
>>>> Both are tied to "Western" countries, through dialectical thinking
>>>> can also be tied to "Eastern" countries, so maybe the issue is one
>>>> of "industrialized" countries?
>>>>
>>>> "A child who has mastered the higher forms of thinking, a child
>>>> who has mastered concepts, does not part with the more elementary
>>>> forms of thinking. In quantitative terms, these more elementary
>>>> forms continue to predominate in many domains of experience for a
>>>> long time. As we noted earlier, even adults often fail to think in
>>>> concepts. S When applied to the domain of life experience, even the
>>>> concepts of the adult and adolescent frequently fail to rise higher
>>>> than the level of the pseudoconcept. They may possess all the
>>>> features of the concepts from the perspective of formal logic, but
>>>> from the perspective of dialectical logic they are nothing more
>>>> than general representations, nothing more than complexes."
>>>> (emphasis added, Vygotsky, 1987, p. 160)
>>> >
>>>> But the issue in your quote has surfaced several times as well in
>>>> my work with Indigenous students and scholars, and we have ended in
>>>> the place noted in your quote above. Particular examples include
>>>> the complexity and unity of some Indigenous cosmological systems,
>>>> their symbolic representation through the medicine wheel, for
>>>> example, and the narratives, signs, gestures, practices, writings
>>>> that accompany these cosmological systems.
>>>>
>>>> Can this be considered another cultural form of rationality (seems
>>>> dialectical in a sense as well ...)?
>>>>
>>>> I know this is different from the question you posed in the follow
>>>> up email, but isn't "demonstrably weaker" a matter of cultural,
>>>> historical, political, economic positioning ... assessed by a
>>>> particular dominant group at a particular time on the basis of
>>>> their own potentially culturally irrelevant assessments?
>>>>
>>>> Is part of your question also asking for a standard that exists
>>>> outside of culture?
>>>>
>>>> Just thoughts here ... jen
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Hi Peter,
>>>>>
>>>>> I am glad to see you join in the discussion, since I know you've
>>>>> done interesting research on inner speech.
>>>>>
>>>>> I am certainly willing to grant that patterns of social
>>>>> interaction will become patterns of self-regulation and thereby
>>>>> parts of patterns of individual thinking. It also makes sense to
>>>>> me, and in my opinion LSV clearly states the view, that the higher
>>>>> psychological processes are cultural processes. I think he goes so
>>>>> far as to say that reasoning is cultural.
>>> >>
>>>>> But, importantly, that is not the same as saying that reasoning
>>>>> *varies* across cultures. We *all* live in culture, and one can
>>>>> say that reasoning is cultural and still maintain that reasoning
>>>>> is universal. Are we willing to take another step, and suggest
>>>>> that in specific cultures the ways that people reason will be
>>>>> different, because the specific conventions of each culture are
>>>>> involved? That is a big step to take, because the rules of logic,
>>>>> to pick what is usually taken to be one component of reasoning,
>>>>> are usually considered to hold regardless of local conventions.
>>>>>
>>>>> One way to take this step, of course, is to say that people in
>>>>> cultures reason in different ways but then to add an evaluative
>>>>> dimension. Those people in that culture reason differently from
>>>>> the way we do, but that is because their reasoning is less
>>>>> adequate than ours. They are more childlike, more primitive.
>>>>> *This* move has often been made, and I can find many passages in
>>>>> LSV's texts where he seems to be saying basically this. That's not
>>>>> a move I find interesting or appealing, and it's not what I am
>>>>> proposing.
>>>>>
>>>>> On the contrary, it seems to me that much of LSV's writing can be
>>>>> read as pointing to the conclusion that *standards* of rationality
>>>>> will vary from one culture another. But I don't think he followed
>>>>> his own pointers, and, as I've said above, it is a pretty radical
>>>>> conclusion to come to.
>>>>>
>>>>> Martin
>>>>>
>>>>> On Jun 27, 2012, at 9:33 AM, Peter Feigenbaum wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Martin--
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If you grant that interpersonal speech communication is
>>>>>> essentially a cultural invention, and that private and inner
>>>>>> speech--as derivatives of interpersonal speech communication--are
>>>>>> also cultural inventions, then Vygotsky's assertions about inner
>>>>>> speech as a tool that adults use voluntarily to conduct and
>>>>>> direct such crucial psychological activities as analyzing,
>>>>>> reflecting, conceptualizing, regulating, monitoring, simulating,
>>>>>> rehearsing (actually, some of these activities were not
>>>>>> specifically asserted by Vygotsky, but instead have been
>>>>>> discovered in experiments with private speech) would imply that
>>>>>> these "higher mental processes" are themselves cultural products.
>>>>>> Even if the *contents* of inner speech thinking happen to bear no
>>>>>> discernible cultural imprint, the process of production
>>>>>> nonetheless does.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Of course, you may not agree that interpersonal speech
>>>>>> communication is a cultural invention. But if you do go along
>>>>>> with the idea that every speech community follows (albeit
>>>>>> implicitly) their own particular conventions or customs for:
>>>>>> assigning specific speech sounds to specific meanings (i.e.,
>>>>>> inventing words); organizing words into sequences (i.e.,
>>>>>> inventing grammar--Chomsky's claims not withstanding); and
>>>>>> sequencing utterances in conversation according to rules of
>>>>>> appropriateness (i.e., inventing rules that regulate "what kinds
>>>>>> of things to say, in what message forms, to what kinds of people,
>>>>>> in what kinds of situations", according to the cross-cultural
>>>>>> work of E. O. Frake), then reasoning based on the use of speech
>>>>>> must be cultural as well.
>>> >>>
>>>>>> My guess is that you are looking for evidence that cultures
>>>>>> reason differently. While there may be evidence for such a claim,
>>>>>> I only want to point out that the tools for reasoning are
>>>>>> themselves manufactured by human culture.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Peter
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Peter Feigenbaum, Ph.D.
>>>>>> Associate Director of Institutional Research
>>>>>> Fordham University
>>>>>> Thebaud Hall-202
>>>>>> Bronx, NY 10458
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Phone: (718) 817-2243
>>>>>> Fax: (718) 817-3203
>>>>>> e-mail: pfeigenbaum@fordham.edu
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> From: Martin Packer <packer@duq.edu>
>>>>>> To: "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
>>>>>> Date: 06/26/2012 05:06 PM
>>>>>> Subject: [xmca] Culture & Rationality
>>>>>> Sent by: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thank you for the suggestions that people have made about
>>>>>> evidence that supports the claim that culture is constitutive of
>>>>>> psychological functions. Keep sending them in, please! Now I want
>>>>>> to introduce a new, but related, thread. A few days ago I gave
>>>>>> Peter a hard time because he wrote that "higher mental processes
>>>>>> are those specific to a culture, and thus those that embody
>>>>>> cultural concepts so that they guide activity."
>>> >>>
>>>>>> I responded that I don't think that LSV ever wrote this - his
>>>>>> view seems to me to have been that it is scientific concepts that
>>>>>> make possible the higher psychological functions (through at time
>>>>>> he seems to suggest the opposite).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> My questions now are these:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 1. Am I wrong? Did LSV suggest that higher mental processes are
>>>>>> specific to a culture and based on cultural concepts?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2. If LSV didn't suggest this, who has? Not counting Peter! :)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 3. Do we have empirical evidence to support such a suggestion?
>>>>>> It seems to me to boil down, or add up, to the claim that human
>>>>>> rationality, human reasoning, varies culturally. (Except who
>>>>>> knows what rationality is? - it turns out that the Stanford
>>>>>> Encyclopedia of Philosophy does not have an entry for
>>>>>> Rationality; apparently they are still making up their minds.)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> that's all, folks
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Martin
>>>>>>
>>>>>> __________________________________________
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>>>>>> __________________________________________
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>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> ______________________________
>>>>
>>>> Jennifer A. Vadeboncoeur, Ph.D.
>>>> Associate Professor
>>>> The University of British Columbia
>>>> Faculty of Education
>>>> 2125 Main Mall
>>>> Library Block 272B
>>>> Vancouver BC V6T-1Z4
>>>> http://leap-educ.sites.olt.ubc.ca/
>>>>
>>>> phone: 1.604.822.9099
>>>> fax: 1.604.822.3302
>>>> __________________________________________
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>>
>
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Andy Blunden*
Joint Editor MCA: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/hmca20/18/1
Home Page: http://home.mira.net/~andy/
Book: http://www.brill.nl/concepts
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