On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human

This essay aims to develop the so-called ‘transformational view’ of human development (advocated by McDowell and Bakhurst) by advancing a play-based model of learning. I first consider challenges to this view posed by Luntley and Rödl who argue that the learning encounter must presuppose some ration...

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主要作者: An, Christopher Joseph G
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出版: Archīum Ateneo 2018
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在線閱讀:https://archium.ateneo.edu/philo-faculty-pubs/81
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/philosophy/article/abs/on-learning-playfulness-and-becoming-human/6B744FFB92C5C7BBAFC9BE5C1ECB3927
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.philo-faculty-pubs-10782022-08-22T05:46:13Z On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human An, Christopher Joseph G This essay aims to develop the so-called ‘transformational view’ of human development (advocated by McDowell and Bakhurst) by advancing a play-based model of learning. I first consider challenges to this view posed by Luntley and Rödl who argue that the learning encounter must presuppose some rational faculty already present in the prelinguistic child. Rödl in particular considers joint attentional episodes in which child and adult attend to objects in their environment together as signifying a uniquely rational consciousness active in the human child. I however argue on phenomenological grounds that this intellectualist treatment is implausible and unconvincing. I propose a play-centered treatment (inspired primarily from Huizinga) that is more sensitive to the life of the child. This perspective of play I maintain scaffolds a shared normative space which enables self-conscious; responsive; and intelligible thought and action. This account motivates what I call a participatory play model of learning which is constitutively non-intellectual but is nonetheless intelligent. It is non-intellectual because it emphasizes building co-reactive relationships and participation in shared cultural practices. But it is also intelligent because it makes possible a distinctively human mode of understanding grounded on an interactive; relational; and imaginatively reflexive engagement with the world. 2018-01-26T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/philo-faculty-pubs/81 https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/philosophy/article/abs/on-learning-playfulness-and-becoming-human/6B744FFB92C5C7BBAFC9BE5C1ECB3927 Philosophy Department Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo learning education play philosophical anthropology child development Developmental Psychology Early Childhood Education Education Philosophy
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic learning
education
play
philosophical anthropology
child development
Developmental Psychology
Early Childhood Education
Education
Philosophy
spellingShingle learning
education
play
philosophical anthropology
child development
Developmental Psychology
Early Childhood Education
Education
Philosophy
An, Christopher Joseph G
On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
description This essay aims to develop the so-called ‘transformational view’ of human development (advocated by McDowell and Bakhurst) by advancing a play-based model of learning. I first consider challenges to this view posed by Luntley and Rödl who argue that the learning encounter must presuppose some rational faculty already present in the prelinguistic child. Rödl in particular considers joint attentional episodes in which child and adult attend to objects in their environment together as signifying a uniquely rational consciousness active in the human child. I however argue on phenomenological grounds that this intellectualist treatment is implausible and unconvincing. I propose a play-centered treatment (inspired primarily from Huizinga) that is more sensitive to the life of the child. This perspective of play I maintain scaffolds a shared normative space which enables self-conscious; responsive; and intelligible thought and action. This account motivates what I call a participatory play model of learning which is constitutively non-intellectual but is nonetheless intelligent. It is non-intellectual because it emphasizes building co-reactive relationships and participation in shared cultural practices. But it is also intelligent because it makes possible a distinctively human mode of understanding grounded on an interactive; relational; and imaginatively reflexive engagement with the world.
format text
author An, Christopher Joseph G
author_facet An, Christopher Joseph G
author_sort An, Christopher Joseph G
title On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
title_short On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
title_full On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
title_fullStr On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
title_full_unstemmed On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
title_sort on learning, playfulness, and becoming human
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2018
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/philo-faculty-pubs/81
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/philosophy/article/abs/on-learning-playfulness-and-becoming-human/6B744FFB92C5C7BBAFC9BE5C1ECB3927
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