Thursday, May 14, 2015

5.14.15 The Phaedrus Project

 I've spent this early morning – since 2am EST – working on what I am calling The Phaedrus Project, although perhaps it should be simply The Phaedrus Project.

The name is taken from the title of Plato’s dialogue, a work that inspires me because it goes to the heart of the matter of thinking (philosophy) via writing versus speaking.  Socrates says the true manner of teaching and learning philosophy – aka of doing soul crafting  [poetic praxis] – is through dialogue: speaking and listening. 

Of course, the key here is the priority of the spoken word, of what, borrowing from Nietzsche, we might call ‘music-making philosophy,’ – invoking too Wynton Marselis’ assertion that speaking is singing.  

This morning I went back to my old edition of What is Called Thinking? – I bought it [a first edition hard cover] on 9/14/92 in Santa Monica, California.  I was called back to WCT in order to re-read Heidegger’s bit on memory.  The principal element of The Phaedrus Project was in large part revealed to me during a session of my Attic class, when Steven broke down αλεθεια and showed it to be rooted in λεθε = forgetting.  If αλεθεια = truth, then truth qua αλεθεια = not forgetting.  Put otherwise, truth = remembering.  Here is yet another instance of κοινονια: the gathering of the learning community via the re-membering or re-collecting of individuals into a collective, subjects gathered together inter-subjectively. 

«Memory is the gathering of thought....This is why we are hear attempting to learn thinking.  We are all on the way together...»

When we put together the formula truth = remembering, and understand re-membering as the κοινονια of the learning community – an event/process of gathering – then we understand the necessity of ‘bootlegging’ the dialogues.



The Spanish title for Being and Leaning occurred [presented itself] to me when I was reading the first lecture in WCT, the summary and transition section where Heidegger introduces the category of ‘apprentice’.  I thought of the conversation I had yesterday with Rocha, when he was recounting the events of the recent weekend’s symposium on study.  At some point during the symposium he interjected the Spanish would  for learning, aprender and made the link between aprender and apprentice.  I thought about that connection when I  read again Heidegger’s «The teacher is ahead of his apprentices in this alone, that he has still far more to learn than they – he has to learn to let them learn.»  And this lead me to imagine the Spanish title for Being and Learning as Ser y Aprender.  Given the current movement of the work via poetic praxis, the Spanish title might also be Ser y Hacer, which offers an evocative sonic play of words.  Or maybe the second option is really the title of the next book, which would come out of 2.0:  Being and Making (i.e., making music/music-making philosophy aka ‘Socrates, make music!’)

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

5.6.2015 Last Day of Academic Year: 3D Audio

So…I haven’t blogged much since the end of 2.0, and I already feel exhausted after writing…what, 15 words?!...but it’s impossible for me not to write after my three hour visit to MOMA. 

Today is my final day of being down here in the NYCtropolis. Left the forest and hill 29 Sunset Drive this morning, feeling energized, inspired, and not a little bit sentimental, especially when I bid farewell to my folks, first my mom at the house, and then my dad at the train station.  I expressed sincere gratitude to both of them for the hospitality, the food, the warmth, the conversation, the laughter, they offered me this past 8 months.  Once on the train to Penn it was all work focus, listening to the last hour of the 34hrs of the Dead Zone I recorded, and reading Martin Jay’s history of the Frankfurt School The Dialectical Imagination, starting the prep work on the chapter on Critical Theory and Education that I’ve been commissioned to write – literally, I was invited and I’m being paid to do this work!  (what academics, let alone philosophers get commissioned to write chapters on Critical Theory and Education?  Oh… the irony, the sweet and bitter irony  <much like this Arnold Palmer I’m drinking at The Grey Dog Café on 16th…MY place!>.   Two things jumped out to me when reading Jay:  first, the reminded that πραχις is the crux of the matter for Critical Theory, understanding praxis as the dialectical relationship between thinking qua theory and action qua practice.  Jay describes it as self-generating, which sounds to me like a euphemism for autonomy, and that ok so far as it goes towards pointing us in the direction of what Castoriadis said in the “Inside Television” installation that is part of the “Cut to Swipe” http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1516
exhibit at MOMA: ‘philosophy is freedom.’   Really?  I so much want to endorse this memory of Attic philosophy, specifically of the thinking/writing of Heraclitus, the street pedagogy of Socrates, and Plato’s dialogues, to the extent the latter are read as literary works, which the translator of the Hackett edition of the Phaedrus insists.  -- < in the compendium to the “Inside Television” installation, there’s that quotation from Aby Warburg that includes the category of the ‘old book,’ which was a central trope for me in B&L2.0 during the late spring/early summer.  I’ll need to search that when I get connected to wifi> --.  But it’s not enough to say  philosophy is freedom, especially when Aristotle explicitly tells us in the Metaphysics that philosophy arises in a particular temporal horizon, σκολε, one that is always available to a particular class of individuals who are granted this ‘free time’ of leisure by a class of individuals who are doing the necessary labor.  The Attic word for the workers in the political economy that ‘granted’ leisure time is δουλος, which is also the word that Paul uses when describing his relationship to Christ. δουλος is translated as ‘slave’.   So we need to hear Castoriodis’
‘philosophy is freedom’ through the mediated sonic filter of memory that recalls the dialectically rendered πραχις of Critical Theory arises from Marx’s 1844 manuscript, specifically his critique of Hegelian idealism.  πραχις is what Hegel’s writing offers as writing.  The second bit in Jay’s opening chapter that caught my attention was the history of the first ever meeting of Marxists in 1923(?...I’ll need to verify the details later) that would be the proto-Frankfurt School.  According to Jay’s history, the funding for that meeting was provided by [insert name later] whose father had moved from Germany to Argentina and made a fortune exporting grain from Argentina to the Continent.  In this sense it’s not at all a stretch to say that the roots and seeds of the Frankfurt School are literally Latin American!

Running out of gas with this writing...

From Penn Station I walked west one block down 34th street to B&H, where I picked up the Tascam portable audio recorded, microphone that Hofstra purchased for me!!!  Before picking it up I spoke with a B&H employee who works in the audio dept.  He confirmed I had all I needed in terms of patch cords, and also, coincidentally -- <there are no coincidences!> -- informed me he had purchased the same Tascam for recording that he does...the recording of live chamber orchestra performances.  As I told him, if it works for him, it’ll work for me.

I then made my way up to MOMA, ostensibly to experience the much talked about Bjork exhibit, that, it turns out, has been trashed by the NYC art critics.  [After attending I have to agree it’s a bit more hype that substance.]  The installation I attended was noteworth for what it described as the 49 speaker 3D audio system that was ‘specially’ designed and installed for the installation.   It was the category of ‘3D Audio’ that most caught my attention, especially since just yesterday I asked, in the final exam for my spring Intro to Philo of Ed, my students to produce a ‘three dimensional’ portrait of the philosophical educator.  3D audio indeed!

Little did I know, but the Bjork installation was the appetizer for what would be a feast of art that I would experience for the next two hours.  The first course, which followed the Bjork appetizer, was the “Cut to Swipe” exhibit that featured the very kind of multimedia works of art I was calling for in the final exam I designed for FDED 127. (I had a sense that I was calling for something of the sort, but only hinted at it during my discussion of the final with the students.  I folded a paper into three parts and made reference to triptych, thinking but not saying it, of Bosch’s “Garden of Earthly Delights.  And further, when describing section 2 I used the analogy of walking into an art exhibit and being greeted with a description on a wall.  After today I am now intending to give my students extra credit if they attend the MOMA and include an selfie and a description of what they encountered. 

The third and main course was the new installation that featured a history of sound recording and broadcasting, starting with Edison and Marconi.  Making Music Modern: Design for Ear and Eye

This hours after picking up the Tascam, and in the wake of completing the 34hrs of radio work!!! To say that I feel the poetic praxis/folk phenomenology project has a kind of destinal force behind it would be to both diminish and understate the amplitude I experienced as I made my way through the exhibit.  At several stops along the way I couldn’t help but smile widely as I encountered the propaganda for early radio, and the description of Marconi’s experiments with recording.  At times I experienced the proverbial goosebumps and chills, especially when an original poster for WQXR, whose studio speakers were donated to WRHU and are now in the very same annex where I recorded the 34hrs.   In sum, I experienced such an intense intimacy with the material in the exhibit that I had moments where I delusionally and manically imagined it was all meant for me!  Of course is was meant for me, or dare I say for the poetic praxis/folk phenomenology project, especially now that it has made the turn toward the sonic, to the recording (documenting of conversations, dialogues), to the engagement with the fundamental questions raised in Phaedrus regarding philosophical dialogue – the voices of philosophy – as the manner of planting seeds of wisdom in the soul.  --<Yet another way of describing ‘soul music’?>--  Planting and sowing of seeds via dialogue is all just a way of talking about cultivation, of cultivating a particular world together, such that we experience freedom together. But…there is indeed the need to engage in παιδεια, specifically, in offering a training in listening.  As I’ve said many times, there is an important distinction between hearing and listening, which maps on to the distinction between speaking and saying.  And this is the first reason why we’ll be recording the seminars. 


“This is a very interesting recording, it’s listed as an in-house FM.” Professor Iguana, hr1 min3 of Dead Zone July Show Part 1, 88.7FM, WRHU.ORG."

-----------------------------------------------------------
FINAL for FDED 127
FDED 127 Intro to Philosophical Education
Prof. Duarte, Hofstra University
Spring 2015

“The teacher who seriously wishes to impart philosophical insight can only aim at teaching the art of philosophizing.  He can do no more than show his students how to undertake, each for himself, the laborious egress that alone affords insight into his principles.  If there is such a thing at all as instruction in philosophy, it can only be instruction in doing one’s own thinking; more precisely, in the independent practice of the art of abstraction.”

            Leonard Nelson

Final project: Portrait of a Philosophical Educator

portrait |ˈpôrtrət, -ˌtrāt|
noun
1 a painting, drawing, photograph, or engraving of a person, esp. one depicting only the face or head and shoulders.
• a representation or impression of someone or something in language or on film: the writer builds up a full and fascinating portrait of a community.

For your final project you should revisit the original question of this course:  Who is the ‘philosophical educator’?  

After a semester of studying many philosophers, and, more importantly, engaging in philosophical study together and forming a learning community, we can now revisit this original question and ask, not simply Who is the ‘philosophical educator’?, but How does the philosophical educator take up their work?, How do they define teaching and learning?, What are some their fundamental goals?  (I’m sure you can think of some additional questions!)

How will you take up these questions?  What will you say and how will you say it?

Part 1a:  write a single sentence that completes following:

A philosophical educator….

Part 1b:  in 250-300 words offer a concise articulation of your sentence.

Part 2:  in 500-750 words offer a concise explanation of the design of your final project, i.e., explain how you are responding to the original question.

Part 3:   with a combination of words (max 750), sounds, and images, offer a portrait of the philosophical educator.   Your portrait should be three dimensional:
three-dimensional  (adjective)
having or appearing to have length, breadth, and depth: a three-dimensional object.
• (of a literary or dramatic work) sufficiently full in characterization and representation of events to be believable.

Specifically, the portrait should have three perspectives:  a three-part description that includes words, sound, and image.

FINAL PROJECTS ARE DUE FRIDAY MAY 15TH NOON, AND SHOULD BE POSTED ON THE DESIGNATED BLACKBOARD DISCUSSION BOARD.

BREAK A LEG!!!

Friday, April 24, 2015

4.24.15 GSCOPE ZoomCHAT: Enacting Poetic Praxis//Originary Thinking

12:50:04 From Eduardo Duarte : still a delay
12:50:52 From Eduardo Duarte : close any programs that are running internet
12:50:59 From Eduardo Duarte : such as web browers
12:54:56 From Eduardo Duarte : Poetic Praxis: Decolonizing Philosophy of Education
13:00:04 From Eduardo Duarte : ok…connection doesn’t seem to be working..
13:00:10 From Eduardo Duarte : so, we seem to be in a good place
13:00:40 From Eduardo Duarte : I’ll do the rigor without it being alienating!
13:00:57 From Eduardo Duarte : because that is exactly what we are trying to do!!
13:01:04 From Eduardo Duarte : in decolonizing philosophy of education
13:01:17 From Eduardo Duarte : because philosophy has been inherited
13:01:21 From Eduardo Duarte : as this detached
13:01:25 From Eduardo Duarte : disembodied
13:01:27 From Eduardo Duarte : enterprise
13:01:33 From Eduardo Duarte : that is based on alienation
13:01:42 From Eduardo Duarte : so the critique CAN”T be alienating
13:01:44 From Eduardo Duarte : YES
13:01:51 From Eduardo Duarte : philosophy is about AFFIRMATION!

13:01:59 From Eduardo Duarte : about MAKING the world we want to be in

Saturday, April 18, 2015

4.18.2015

Last post from 4.06.2015 was initiated with the thesis:

Thesis: The dialectic is the way of truth. [period]

This anticipates what appears to be a 'return' to the dialectic.  Is it actually a return, or is the relationship between Being and learning already a yet to be recognized dialectic?

Reading Marx's 1844 critique of Hegel this week made clear to me that the work post Being and Learning, will begin with the working out of the genealogy of poetic praxis.  This genealogy, very generally speaking, unfolds: Heraclitus>Socrates>Hegel>Marx>Freire, with the necessity of Nietzsche and perhaps even Foucault offering guidance.  Then too Heidegger.  Of course, Irigaray and DuBois stand as the two principal figures guiding the project, the one demonstrating the syncretic form of thinking/writing of poetic praxis, and the the other challenging to create a new logic.

 The matter will begin, first, this summer with the writing of the chapter on critical theory for the encyclopedia.  Next, with the writing of the paper for the Green College, UBC, Vancouver talk in August, which will begin with the fundamental question concerning the inheritance of philosophy from Aristotle onwards as the intellectual/abstract speculative work of a particular group (class) that 'enjoys' schole.  The Attic class I'm currently taking will figure in as a preliminary anecdotal prompt on not only learning ancient Greek but on encountering the foundation of Attic Greek culture, specifically, its slave based political economy.   From there we arrive at Aristotle and his presumptions about who does philosophy.   This leads to the question: is philosophy ideology? is ideology an abstraction from from historico-material reality?  Is philosophy an expression of alienation?  These questions set up a revisiting of Marx's critique of Hegel, and, finally, the engagement with the Freirean category of conscientizacion: in-between Marx & Hegel.

Marx in the morning, Hegel at night.



Monday, April 6, 2015

4.6.2015 The Ontology of the Dialectic: reflections on a note to Kelly

Thesis: The dialectic is the way of truth. [period]

Implication: To stand in the middle is to remain in the ontology of the flow of truth (the real), and, from a human perspective, that is the groove of the blues…a soulful groove, but one that is in the middle of the no/Yes.

Context:  remember, Heraclitus (Ηερακλιτυς) was called 'The Dark One'.  

Existential: I suppose I'm caught in the middle of the dialectic space between the critical no and the affirmative YES! 


Saturday, April 4, 2015

04.04.2015 Full Moon, Easter Weekend

PES Memphis was a totalizing experience, such that it consumed all of my philosophical attention in the weeks leading up, the week it happened, and the two weeks after (essentially, the entire month of March).  Today, finally, I'm back to thinking beyond (post) PES Memphis, and the gesture that takes me beyond is the sharing of a rough draft of a paper I composed in 2014, when I was completing the work on the paper "Leaning by Jamming" at Drew University

Aural, aurality, oral tradition, audition (in the sense of hearing), auditory perception: In Praise of Sound and the (re)Turn to a the revelatory and poetic (making or saying something) power of Sound.  [Sonic studies]   A (re)Turn to the Auditory Dimension
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." (John 1:1)

We recall Heraclitus recognized the primary role of listening after he found himself hearing Logos.  And also Parmenides when he arranged his poem The Way of Truth around the revelation spoken to the youth by the goddess.  Socrates is the last Orphic philosopher, the last of the musical philosophers who emerged from an oral/sonic tradition of truth telling and meaning making.  After him, with Plato and Aristotle, writing and reading replaced listening and speaking, and the power of seeing become the ultimate authority.   And so, with Luce Irigaray, we can say: “Western tradition is founded on looking-at rather than on listening-to.  In our tradition, listening is at the service of looking, especially with regard to teaching.”(Irigaray, 2008, p. 231)
Reiner Schurmann (1990, p. 65) also registers a similar critique of Western philosophy, which, he says, culminates with Husserl’s phenomenology and the primacy it grants sight.  “Within Western philosophy, there is nothing new about the primacy Husserl gives sight.  Ever since Aristotle, sight has remained the privileged metaphor for the activity of the mind.  Even more, since the classical Greeks, to think is to see.” Hearing, by contrast, is a retrieval of our being in time, and of a temporality understood as movement.  “Hearing…is the sense attuned to time: the ear perceived movements of approach and retreat…A sound is not yet, then it approaches, it is there, and already fades and is no more.”  And, what’s more, hearing, or what occurs when we listen, denotes much of what has been indicated about the philosophical education offered by music, especially when we link the English word to its German sibling, horen.  To hear is to be enjoined, implicated in call.   Seeing requires distance, a gap, or space.  Hearing, by contrast, is intensified by proximity.  “The closer a sound is the better I perceive it.  Hence ‘belonging’ has the connotation of ‘hearing’. The German gehoren derives from horen. In Greek, Latin, and Germanic languages, to be capable of hearing is to be capable of obeying: horchen [listen] means gerhochen [obey, follow a (higher) power].   The eye is the organ of distance and the constantly present. The ear is the organ of involvement and of disclosure in time.”
  
“The primary presence of the God of the West has been the God of Word, YHWH. ‘And God said…’  The creative power of the Hebrew God is word, which is spoken forth as power: from word comes the world.” (Don Ihde, Listening and Voice: Phenomenologies of Sound. 2nd ed. SUNY: 2007, 14)

“Not only are sounds, in the metaphysical tradition, secondary, but the inattention to the sounding of things has led to the gradual loss of understanding whole ranges of phenomena that are there to be noted.” (Ihde, 13)

“What is being called visualism here as a symptom is the whole reductionist tendency, which in seeking to purify experiences belies its richness at the source.  A turn the auditory dimension is thus potentially more than a simple changing of variables.  It begins as a deliberate decentering of a dominant tradition in order to discover what may be missing as a result of the traditional double reduction of vision as the main variable and metaphor.  This deliberate change of emphasis from the visual to the auditory dimension at first symbolizes a hope to find material for a recovery of the richness of primary experience that is now forgotten or covered over in the too tightly interpreted visualist traditions.”(Ihde, 13)

“For what is needed is a philosophy of listening.  But is this a possibility? If philosophy has its very roots intertwined with a secret vision of Being that has resulted in the present state of visualism, can it listen with equal profundity?  What is called for is an ontology of the auditory.  And if any first expression is a ‘singing of the world,’ as Merleau-Ponty puts it, then what begins here is a singing that begins in a turn to the auditory dimension.”(Ihde, 15)


“In Praise of Sound,” the first chapter of Don Ihde’s book, Listening and Voice: Phenomenologies of Sound, offers a compelling genealogy of the visualist tradition that has dominated western philosophy, explaining how our most iconic philosophical words express the deeply held assumptions that truth is revealed through a radiant showing: 

…the question is then one of phenomenology, of the so-called ‘things’ themselves, and whether or not the reduction is to a material world that can be seen, or towards one that can be heard.   Of course, there is the question of whether or not a final reduction is necessary.  Indeed, my concern isn’t necessarily with mounting an auralogical ‘revolution,’ not in making a ‘turn’ that would be exclusive or excluding of the visual.  I’m not interested in ‘over-turning’ but, rather, in ‘re-turning’ to sound, first, by way of [re-covering (in the sense of re-tracing) the ground] re-turning to the most ancient of ancient philosophical ideas and modes of teaching and learning that are oral, and thereby re-articulating the primordial, originating power/force of sound.  

…further I want to make an important distinction, or emphasize something important that is revealed in dialogic education: when jamming is happening participants are ‘saying something’ individually and collectively.   Sounds are heard as words, as expressing the power of Word (Logos[1]).   A dialogic jam is so much more than the interplay or interaction of ‘sound.’   Yes, the movement of bodies, the shuffling of feet, the crossing and uncrossing of legs, yawning, laughter, the tapping of fingers on keyboards, the movement of pens and pencils across paper, and all the ‘sounds’ that make up the gathering of a learning community are integral, of course, but they are not the principal components of what is being ‘said’ when people are saying something.   When sound is said it expresses the power of words.  And it is this power that we hear conveyed in Genesis, and later by St. John’s gospel. It is the gathering force of Logos, which Heraclitus expressed.

The flow is the flow of Logos.  

Nothing faster than light, but nothing heavier than sound:  YHWH ‘said’ let there be light.




[1] 1. Philosophy
a. In pre-Socratic philosophy, the principle governing the cosmos, the source of this principle, or human reasoning about the cosmos.
b. Among the Sophists, the topics of rational argument or the arguments themselves.
c. In Stoicism, the active, material, rational principle of the cosmos; nous. Identified with God, it is the source of all activity and generation and is the power of reason residing in the human soul.
2. Judaism
a. In biblical Judaism, the word of God, which itself has creative power and is God's medium of communication with the human race.
b. In Hellenistic Judaism, a hypostasis associated with divine wisdom.
3. Christianity In Saint John's Gospel, especially in the prologue (1:1-14), the creative word of God, which is itself God and incarnate in Jesus. Also called Word.