Wednesday, February 25, 2015

2.25.15 Phronesis: The 'Other' Category

Originary thinking in terms of identifying learning as originating  is announced in the fragment:  "more poetry, less prose...", which is a play on Lyotard's “Poiein, c’est faire,”  poiein means to make.  The move to techne was initated on OPM 270(271), November 12th (2004 & 2014) Meditation, Being and Learning,  pp. 270-271, and then was worked out further when I recalled the necessary coupling of techne with praxis, which is to say the need to qualify praxis with techne.  And today I am interested in a further qualification of  word that does not once appear in Being and Learning, nor in 2.0: Phronesis.
  
Phronesis (φρὀνησισ), is Attic Greek word for a type of wisdom --  thus, falling within the set of categories that are held together by thinking, which I identifying with poetic [the most general way of using the term that identifies learning as crafting, creative making, production as opposed to consumption of knowledge].  Other words: praxis, techne, sophia, nous, episteme, mousike.  This is the initial way that I would organize a fundamental set of philosophical terms.

It was on Monday, when preparing for my Attic Greek class,  that I ‘read’ for the first time in the ‘original’ Heraclitus  fragment “Thinking is common to all,” and discovered (or encountered) for the first time that the word he uses in that fragment is phronesis (φρὀνησισ).  Thus the need to further qualify praxis, which is to say, to work out further learning as originating, as poetic, and thus to work ‘more poetry, less prose’ [Poiein, c’est faire] by returning to Aristotle on phronesis (φρὀνησισ), which is precisely what I intend to do next week with my Intro to Philo Ed class.

So in terms of 2.0, the place to begin further work on poiein as techne and praxis are the commentaries that take up Heraclitus’ fragment: “Thinking is common to all.” And that work was initiated with OPM 266(267), November 8th (2004 & 2014) Meditation, Being and Learning pp. 266-267

The past month’s thinking/writing under the influence of Heraclitus and the koinon initially lead me to emphasize the learning community as the gathering of the many (ta panta).  But the discovery of koinonia was a major turning, so much that two days ago when I was writing my commentary I described it as taking me all the way back to the originary question of the turn – the educational turning on of thinking.   With the discovery of koinonia, however, this return to the originary question has felt like a conversion in the sense of the Latin conversion, convers to be ‘turned around’.   That is, with koinonia I have been turned around to the originary educational question of turning on thinking and have re-turned to the learning community with an entirely new understanding of the force of this gathering as a spiritual power that is uniquely capable of effacing us with ourselves and, together with others, overcoming ourselves (both in the sense of experience a vertical transcendence above ourselves  --  what DuBois allows us to call the Wagnerian altitude and Nietzsche six thousand feet about the self -- and the horizontal transcendence toward the past and future, and the other.   With the horizontal transcendence we re-turn and reconnect with history, but also leap into an unknown future with faith, hope in the possibility of justice and freedom).

The conversion to the originary question of education re-turns me to the learning community as a totalizing experience.  Totalizing in the sense that when Heraclitus says “Thinking is common to all,” the ho koinos (the common) is what gathers everything.  There is nothing outside what is gathered by Logos, which is to say nothing exists outside of this gathering [this is not the moment to take up the question of the xenos  in Plato’s Sophist  who overturns ‘father Parmenides’ logic by compelling us to think the existence of nothing].   Here the concern is the totalizing force of Logos as what gathers, and what is thought when the originary question of education is taken up.  A concern because of the intersubjectivity it presumes is one that demolishes the liberal democratic modality of subjectivity.  A concern because the fellowship of koinonia demands a diminishment of this subject into “the co-construction of a common world.”(BL 266 Subjectivity is replaced by inter-subjectivity, individuality by friendship.   Citing Arendt, again, on Socrates I emphasize why the koinos is the world built by dialogue, a dialogue that is inconclusive, open-ended, and, because it is the work of poiesis it makes a work of art that is mearningful in-and-for-itself.  Arendt: “It is obvious that this kind of dialogue, which doesn’t need a conclusion in order to be meaningful, is most appropriate for and most frequently shared by friends.  Friendship to a large extent, indeed, consists of this kind of talking about something that friends have in common.  By talking about what is between them, it becomes ever more common to them.”(cited 11/8/04  BL 266)  


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