Transcript Slide 1

GKAS 3341 4 cr.

Philosophy & Research of Global Education Globaalikasvatuksen filosofia & tutkiminen

k t k . u l a p l a n d . f i / g l o b a l e d u c a t i o n / g k a s 3 3 4 1

GKAS 3341 4 cr.

LECTURE SESSIONS

: 6 x 3h

EXERCISE SESSIONS

: 0h

k t k . u l a p l a n d . f i / g l o b a l e d u c a t i o n / g k a s 3 3 4 1

Lecture 1

(cont’d … »)

: The role of education and the science of education in a changing world:

»

Given the rapid change of our world, the globalizing paradigm of the human society, and the innate need of each citizen of this planet to live a meaningful life, the potential significance of education cannot be overestimated: education needs to become

change-agent for a sustainable future

!

»

Two relevant and provocative questions are: (1) Is education, as a science, capable of

addressing the educational needs of human development

? (2) Is there any justification for

education to be designated as a science

?

»

In natural sciences there are basic coherent assumptions and presuppositions about

physical reality

that the generality of the scientific community agrees upon!

»

There are virtually no ontological assumptions about

human reality

that would be accepted by the majority of scholars in human sciences (cf. the function and capacity of the

science of medicine

vs.

the science of education)

!

Science and the scientific method:

»

There are two central concepts in the philosophy of science:

ontology

and

epistemology

; ontology signifies

what things are in their own essential reality

, epistemology signifies

how we can obtain knowledge about those essential realities

!

»

The aspiration of all science is the

pursuit and acquisition of verifiable knowledge

; the aspiration of technology is to

apply and implement that knowledge to practical use

!

» »

Fundamentally, the task of science is to

produce meaningful and relevant knowledge

!

What would you consider as ‘meaningful and relevant knowledge’? How can such knowledge be obtained and ascertained?

»

Truly

meaningful

and

relevant

knowledge results in: seeing the overwhelming greatness of creation, and feeling small and

»

humble (not humiliated) before the greatness of creation!

Seeing greatness involves ‘romantic wonderment’ in creation: the ability to be amazed, intrigued and delighted by things that are of no immediate use or amusement to oneself; the fruit of true knowledge is always

humility

; therefore, arrogance is an outcome

»

of ignorance!

Science is a form of search after

truth

— scientific knowledge, while studying the workings of particular phenomena, seeks in the last analysis to understand the

essence of things

in a credible and verifiable manner!

»

In the

science of physics

: the aim is not only to explain isolated physical events and observations but also to decode the

essential principles of the material reality

, to find core natural laws that govern and explain the physical universe!

Lecture 1

(« … cont’d)

:

The pursuit of scientific universals and the science of education:

»

The aspiration for essentiality, in science, focusses the overall direction of science on the

universal qualities

of reality (not on the particular cases and isolated phenomena), also known as

universals

!

»

In pursuit of scientific universals, it could be argued that ontology is

always objective

and

ultimately unattainable

, epistemology is

always subjective

and

progressively attainable

(towards more relative objectivity); in other words,

scientific theories are approximations of reality

, not reality itself!

»

What

can

we know?

»

Neither the science of education, nor the academic community around it, are focussed on the

universals of human reality and education

, a vision that would have a more

universal appeal to the human mind

; as long as mental limitations persist, such visionary approaches are considered either irrelevant or impracticable!

»

Is the quest for universals in the science of education a

relevant pursuit

or is it an exercise in useless abstraction? Why?

»

There are justified grounds for lack of interest in, even fear of, educational universals: the millennial experience of humankind with the

abuse of social, political and religious authority

has bred apprehension of the use of intellectual and spiritual leadership, particularly in relation to the

interpretation of human existence

!

»

The repercussions of dread of doctrinal orthodoxy are manifested in

the fear of the scientific study of human (and educational) universals

, particularly in the Western world (elsewhere, the effect is somewhat less dramatic but, since academic tradition is Western in origin, this is true for most academic people worldwide)!

Lecture 2

(cont’d … »)

:

Background philosophies of social and behavioural sciences:

»

In the background of the actual schools of thought within social and behavioural science that have highly influenced educational philosophy there are

general modernist and postmodernist schools of philosophy

!

»

Phenomenology

maintains that anything that is not immediately received by human consciousness has to be discarded; this method seeks to realize only the immediate object, the phenomenon, and to grasp its ideal meaning through an instant act of intuition or vision!

»

Hermeneutics

is a rather old school of thought, originally related to the interpretation and biblical criticism, but it found new impetus in beginning of the 20 th century; some of its modern forms focus on the problem of

being

and its

temporality

, with a deep concern for various aspects of human existence and the anguish of modern society!

»

Existentialism

dates back to the 19 th century, but its modern forms influenced strongly by hermeneutics and phenomenology; existentialism values

subjective truth

when attained with sincerity and intensity of the commitment; this culminated in the assertion that all values are subjective, that there is nothing to guide us in our decisions!

»

What consequences such philosophies may have had on perspective on education and human reality?

»

The emergence of the various schools of social and behavioural thought represents a consistent tendency from

static and passive (‘eternal’)

conception of knowledge to an

adaptive and active (‘temporal’)

one — herein lies a confusion between ontology (the object of knowledge) and epistemology (knowledge itself)!

»

RE : In pursuit of scientific universals, it could be argued that ontology is always objective and ultimately unattainable,

epistemology is always subjective

and progressively attainable (towards more relative objectivity); in other words,

scientific theories are approx imations of reality

, not reality itself!

Lecture 2

(« … cont’d)

:

Schools of educational and pedagogic thinking:

» »

How is it relevant for education to consider

views on human reality

?

Everyone entertains

some view of human reality

, whether explicitly or implicitly, whether consciously or subconsciously, whether

»

articulate or intuitive — and this is particularly true of educationalists and their work!

“Every education teaches a

philosophy

; if not by dogma then by suggestion, by implication, by atmosphere ... If it does not all combine to convey some general view of life, it’s not education at all.”

(G. K. Chesterton, 1950) !

»

The existence of background philosophies behind various modes of thought in social and behavioural science is both recognized and discussed by various scholars of the field; however, these historical philosophical views, particularly those concerning the reality

»

and evolution of human society,

are so varied that they appear almost incompatible

!

Positivism

is the scientific approach demanding that any view that is adopted must be based on ‘positive knowledge’, on empirically

»

verifiable facts; thus, positivism regards metaphysical questions as unanswerable and, therefore, irrelevant!

Behaviourism

is a materialist naturalist approach that can be seen as ‘offspring’ of positivism; it seeks to gain knowledge about behaviour based squarely on measurable phenomena; behaviourism assumes that such empiricism is intrinsic to human reality, i.e. measurable facts are

all

there is to human reality, or at least human behaviour!

»

Instrumentalism

and

pragmatism

draw on a utilitarian and pragmatic philosophy; instrumentalism holds the various forms of human activity to be instruments devised by humans to solve complex individual and social problems; here,

truth

has no transcendental or eternal reality and emerges almost exclusively from experience!

»

Cognitive psychology

seeks to examine internal mental processes such as problem solving, memory and language; it holds that psychological phenomena could not be properly understood simply by merely identifying and analysing their elementary parts — that the whole is different from and more than the sum of the parts!

»

Constructivism

assumes that learning is at its best when the learner is actively constructing his or her understanding;

cognitive constructivism

focusses on the developmental phases of a child as it grows and matures;

social constructivism

emphasizes the influence and instrumentality of cultural and social contexts in the learning process!

Lecture 3

(cont’d … »)

:

The dilemma of universals, the science of education and human progress:

»

The incompatibilities, discrepancies, vagueness, and uncertainty have brought the evolution of human sciences to a point where

universal ontological premises are avoided to the last

; if not openly dismissed as irrelevant and nonsensical, they are unconsciously avoided and intuitively regarded as useless philosophy or metaphysical abstractions!

»

Most research in education has come to be essentially

descriptive

, and of the smaller number of non-descriptive studies, only very few deal with

universal

concepts; pedagogical research is mainly concerned with surveying educational situations, cases, models, or specific phenomena — not developing the

theory of education

as a whole!

»

The quest for universals has, in recent decades, broadened the perspective of educational research and paved the way for a richer and more holistic investigation into the phenomenon of education; surprisingly, the outcomes are most visibly present in the domain of

educational application

!

»

Development-oriented educational approaches, such as

action research

and

learning organization

, share an aspiration to reorient, by means of renewal of everyday practice, the community’s social life; while seemingly

pragmatic in appearance

, such approaches are often

philosophical in foundation

!

Lecture 3

(« … cont’d)

:

Scientific belief vs. dogmatic belief — need for holistic vision:

»

Acquiring scientific knowledge calls for vision with a

universal appeal to the human mind

; there is a need for

vision and holism

, on the one hand, and

systematic and methodical means

, on the other!

»

Can ‘vision & holism’ be harmonized with ‘systematic & methodical means’? Are these contradictory

by their very nature

?

»

The terms

reductionism

and

holism

are often, mistakenly, taken almost as synonyms for ‘scientific’ vs. ‘religious’ — the former implying systematic and critical acquisition of knowledge, the latter implying a vague and uncritical (and often authoritarian) formation of doctrines; this interpretation is inaccurate!

»

The dichotomy of

scientific belief

vs.

dogmatic belief

is a very old philosophical dilemma! What is the difference between these?

»

Religious faith

, as such, cannot be automatically equated with ‘dogmatic belief’ — only the

dogmatic expressions

of religious faith can be thus characterized; likewise,

academic knowledge

, as such, cannot be automatically equated to ‘scientific belief’ — only

critically tested expressions

of academic knowledge can!

»

Dogmatic belief

is: conviction in particular views without solid rational grounds and adequate factual justification, and doctrinal belief in an incoherent and atomistic collection of tenets — in short:

unfounded and unconnected set of beliefs

!

»

Scientific belief

is: careful choice of theorems (‘tenets’) using critical criteria, well-thought-out justifications and even attempts to falsify its own assumptions, and a pursuit of coherence — in short:

tested and coherent system of ‘beliefs’

!

»

Holistic vision

seeks scientific knowledge — not just by testing its claims before adopting them — but by seeking to

link and connect the various ‘truths’ it has found

and formulate them into a

coherent whole

!

Lecture 4

(cont’d … »)

:

General Systems Theory and its basic assumptions

(cont’d … »)

:

»

General Systems Theory

is one of the most credible efforts to describe universals and to pursue holistic vision in science; it challenges the Cartesian view of the mechanistic-deterministic reductionistic universe as a ‘clockwork’ and calls for a holistic approach to reality that sees

systemic interconnectedness as the prime quality in creation

!

»

General Systems Theory, rather than reducing a given entity to the qualities of its constituent elements, shifts the focus to the relationships of the elements and, more importantly, to their connection with the whole of which they are parts!

»

General Systems Theory maintains that

the same conceptual ideas and principles underline very different domains of reality

and, hence, different disciplines (physics, biology, technology, sociology, education etc.);

“there exist models, principles, and laws that apply to generalized systems or their subclasses”

(Ludvig von Bertalanffy, 1968) !

»

General Systems Theory postulates that

reality as a whole is governed by certain universal principles that apply to all kinds of systems

and that

reality is, in the last analysis, one holistic entity

; moreover, it maintains that all systems are synergic: they are more than the sum of their constituent elements!

Lecture 4

(« … cont’d)

:

General Systems Theory and its basic assumptions

(« … cont’d)

:

»

Systemic universals include (1)

the principle of systemic hierarchy

: reality has a hierarchical structure where each higher level includes the qualities of lower levels as well as additional qualities of its own!

»

Systemic universals include (2)

the principle of bifurcation

: open systems can be in the state of instability — a non-linear and chaotic situation, a crisis in pursuit of new order; a system in this state of bifurcation can undergo a breakthrough into a new stable order, but it can also give in to entropy and experience a breakdown!

»

Systemic universals include (3)

the principle of unity in diversity

: systems emerge towards greater unity among constituent elements, exhibiting holistic qualities not reducible to the attributes of individual elements; high level of diversity and complexity of elements is needed for qualities of the system to emerge!

»

Systemic universals include (4)

the principle of macrodeterminism in living systems

: the development of living systems is non deterministic; the details of their future is not fully determined by their past; living systems evolve macrodeterministically towards higher complexity and more sophisticated order!

»

Systemic universals include (5)

the principle of evolutionary development

: living systems undergo a progressive but non-linear evolution with a tendency towards sophistication and refinement; this macrodeterminism is caused by the potential inherent to the system; the system can evolve only in the direction of its potential!

»

Systemic universals include (6)

the principle of historical social progress

: social systems undergo a progressive evolution with the potential towards greater unity and more refined order, i.e. larger and better organized societies!

Lecture 5

(cont’d … »)

:

Biological and social evolution, and the evolutionary time-frame:

»

The

inorganic nature

(such as minerals or air or water) displays

no trace of consciousness

and its elements merely exist and interact within basic laws of physics; this is the most basic and most primitive level of

contingent existence

!

»

Basic

biological systems

(such as monocellular organisms or plants) demonstrate a

goal-oriented growth

, endued with the power of growth and guided by both a genetic program as well as environmental conditions; this is the first level of

organic existence

!

»

Animals

show clear signs of

awareness or consciousness

, exhibiting in varying intensities ability to perceive their environment through senses and react to its stimuli through movement, activity, and even emotions; this is the first level of

conscious existence

!

»

The Earth was formed about 4’600 million years ago; inorganic evolution continued for about 800 million years before

biological evolution

could start; after the lapse of 1’300 million years more, monocellular systems evolved into primitive multicelled vegetation; after another 1'600 million years, with the appearance of first primitive animals, the

evolution of consciousness

emerged (i.e. 900 million years ago)!

»

The first level of

contingent existence

was the ruling form of existence during the first 17% of the Earth’s life; the first level of

organic existence

(monocellular or plant life) was the highest level of evolutionary order for 63% of the existence of the Earth; the first level of

conscious existence

was the most advance level of existence for 20 % of the Earth’s history!

»

The beginnings of

social evolution

can be traced back to the emergence of the primitive human species, referring to the time of human influence on earth; this period comprises only a few million years, i.e. a mere 0.1 % of the Earth’s life!

Lecture 5

(« … cont’d)

:

Differences in human vs. animal consciousness:

»

Biologically, there is no point in separating human beings from the rest of the animal kingdom: there are no biological evolutionary leaps significant enough to separate man as a distinct life form from animals (such as the distinction between plants and animals)!

»

In terms of

consciousness

, an evolutionary leap seems to have taken place: it is possible to detect equally significant differences between

human consciousness

and

animal awareness

, as there are between animal awareness and plant non-awareness!

»

Animals are aware, through their senses, of their surroundings and are able to react, through their instincts, to these stimuli; this can be called

instinctive consciousness

and results in what we call ‘animal behaviour’!

»

Human beings appear to possess at least two additional (and fundamentally different) forms of consciousness: (1) consciousness of ego or

rational consciousness

; (2) consciousness of potential or

ideal consciousness

; these describe the evolutionary level of what one might call

meta-conscious systems

!

»

Rational consciousness

includes: consciousness of self, that not only the environment exists but ‘I’ exists in that environment, an awareness of one’s relationship with the surrounding reality, a capacity for rational thought and the volition to act deliberately, and to imagine and create new things through the rational application of latent talents!

»

Ideal consciousness

includes: consciousness and innate awareness of the possibility for overcoming the self in favour of ascending towards some greater purpose, for aspiring towards some truth or reality greater than ones ego, the conception of ethical right vs.

wrong and commitment to high ideals and principles!

Lecture 6

(cont’d … »)

:

Education and the current paradigm of globalization:

»

What can a cynical and non-holistic world-view contribute to our understanding of

human reality

and

the purpose of education

?

»

The problem is not with globalization

per se

, but with what is

made

global through individual and collective human choices, which, in turn, are dependent on the

moral maturity

of the human race; human beings tend, however, to first

misuse

any potentially wonderful thing before learning to

use it as it is supposed to be

!

»

Like a stubborn growing child often fails to welcome his maturation, likewise, humankind is persistently clinging to its childish tenets: its fragmented world-view, its obsolete modes of interaction, its outdated social structures, its immature political organization!

»

Like an adolescent at the peak of his physical development, humankind is

physically and materially highly advanced

; we have the perfect machinery for the

needs and life of a matured humanity

; now, it is

maturity itself

that needs to be attained!

»

What does ‘maturity’ mean? How can it be achieved?

»

Unity of purpose, unity of vision, unity of core values, unity of law and of principles of global governance are, not only practically indispensable for the management of human affairs, but also sit at the heart of humanity’s

identity

in its new global attire!

»

There is a basic futuristic choice that our global paradigm of change presents: Do we want to be reactive pawns drifting in the flow of global change,

or

do we want to have some control over our futures and manage change towards a desirable and sustainable paradigm of globalization? It is this latter choice that brings

educational reform

to the centre of discussion!

Lecture 6

(« … cont’d)

:

Action research and the tradition of learning research:

»

Action research

and

the tradition of learning research

are some of the methodical approaches that, while avoiding the dilemmas of cultural bias, facilitate a

collective and ‘case-sensitive’ approach to developmental research

in the area of global education and multiculturalism!

»

Action research and the tradition of learning research can be seen as

tools for educational development

, not as ‘scientific objectivity’ (although, they can serve that purpose, too) — they facilitate the practice of research

within the collaborative context of a ‘third culture’ and a culture of learning

!

»

Simply put, action-oriented research is just another (academic) name for models of planning and thinking that are functional in terms of long-term sustainability and gradual step-by-step progress; here,

the practitioner of science becomes a member of a broader ‘learning community’

of diverse participants!

“While Finland is my fatherland, Europe is our hereditary land, but it is the world that is our only home, our only native land!”

Mika Waltari (1979)

“We have had a profound paradigm shift about the whole Earth. We know it now as a jewel in the space, a fragile water planet. And we have seen that it has no natural borders.”

Marilyn Ferguson (1980)

“... we are one race, on one planet, with total responsibility for the future of both.”

Willis Harman (1970)

“Right living is no longer the fulfilment of an ethical or religious demand. For the first time in history the physical survival of the human race depends on a radical change of the human heart.”

Erich Fromm (1976)

“All men have been created to carry forward an ever-advancing civilization.” “Regard man as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value. Education can, alone, cause it to reveal its treasures and enable mankind to benefit therefrom.” “That one indeed is a man who, today, dedicateth himself to the service of the entire human race. … It is not for him to pride himself who loveth his own country, but rather for him who loveth the whole world.

The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens.”

Bahá’u’lláh (circa 1880)