Participatory Literature: Difference between revisions

From P2P Foundation
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with ' =More Information= From DAVID HILES, Department of Psychology, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK A Selection of the Participatory Literature • Ancient tradition • B...')
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:




Line 6: Line 5:
From DAVID HILES, Department of Psychology, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK
From DAVID HILES, Department of Psychology, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK


A Selection of the Participatory Literature
"What I am calling the participatory turn isn’t very recent at all. Its origins go back to
ancient tradition, and is at the centre of much of Eastern philosophy. In Western thought it
can be traced through the writings of Pascal and Nietzsche, and is clearly central to a nondualistic
position that emerges from the work of Husserl and Heidegger, and has been
gathering momentum ever since. Table 1 below sketches out the emergence and progress of this
turn."
 
 
A Selection of the Participatory Literature (Table 1)


• Ancient tradition
• Ancient tradition

Revision as of 04:04, 14 August 2009


More Information

From DAVID HILES, Department of Psychology, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK

"What I am calling the participatory turn isn’t very recent at all. Its origins go back to ancient tradition, and is at the centre of much of Eastern philosophy. In Western thought it can be traced through the writings of Pascal and Nietzsche, and is clearly central to a nondualistic position that emerges from the work of Husserl and Heidegger, and has been gathering momentum ever since. Table 1 below sketches out the emergence and progress of this turn."


A Selection of the Participatory Literature (Table 1)

• Ancient tradition • Blaise Pascal (1670) (esprit de finesse) • Friedrich Nietzsche (1882) (earth; spirit/body) • Edmund Husserl (1913) (phenomenology) • Martin Heidegger (1927/1962) (dwelling; readiness-to-hand) • Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1945/1962) (embodiment) • Ludwig Wittgenstein (1953) (meaning as practice) • Paul Tillich (1955) (participation and knowledge) • Michael Polanyi (1958) (indwelling; participative realism) • Marjorie Grene (1966) (the knower and the known) • Hubert Dreyfus (1972) (coping, development of a practice) • J. J. Gibson (1976) (affordances) • Morris Berman (1981) (participatory consciousness) • John Searle (1983) (background of know-how, intentionality) • William Poteat (1985) (“mindbodily grounded in the world”)