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    Insights intoWittgenstein &Curriculum

    May 6

    2010In this paper I attempt to show Wittgensteins connectionbetween language and meaning via his masterpiece:Philosophical Investigations. As previously demonstratedby Wittgenstein, until his theory made print, the past hadstrictly followed the Aristotelian scheme of learningthrough westernized logic. Even though Wittgenstein had

    previously made note that what cannot be shown we mustpass over in silence, he eventually reconsidered his originaltheory. What resulted was the culmination of over twenty

    years of radical evolutionary thought that led to hisseminal work: Philosophical Investigations.

    Searchingfor ClarityandMeaningthroughLanguage

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    It appears to some educational philosophers that Wittgensteins last

    philosophical publication Philosophical Investigations, reconceived a

    curriculum that until then had appeared rather narrow in scope and which

    offered a more limited means of attaining knowledge and meaning.

    If there was any contribution to the field of curriculum, Wittgensteins

    concept of language-games was his contribution. Wittgenstein's earlier work

    Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus was concerned primarily with logical form and

    his insistence that what cannot be said clearly or shown we must pass over

    in silence. Eventually, Wittgenstein decided that it needed to be revised and

    hence his final work: Philosophical Investigations.

    According to Wittgensteins work in Philosophical Investigations, curriculum

    should be re-conceived as an act of language-play. In Philosophical

    Investigations Wittgenstein attempts to describe how language and the

    world relate. By doing this he is indirectly raising questions about the

    assumptions weve made about curriculum.

    Wittgenstein asserts that curriculum scholars should reconsider the process

    of how we learn by rejecting the representational view that language acts as

    scaffolding connecting the external environment with the human mind.

    Instead Wittgenstein suggests that learning is related to our everyday use of

    language and that we learn indirectly through activities in which we engage

    language with every day life.

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    Other scholars believe that those who take the challenge of teaching

    seriously must pay closer attention to the pedagogical language employed in

    the classroom. As part of the curriculum educators dont always want to

    recognize the conceptual relationship between the language used by

    teachers as well as the language used by students.

    For example, Wittgenstein saw classroom activity as a way in which the

    meaning of words evolve from the way students and teachers use language

    in the classroom. What I found most interesting was Wittgensteins

    intellectual pedagogy that lent itself to a new radical approach in human

    thinking and understanding. Peters and Marshall (1999) found Wittgensteins

    later philosophy to be pedagogical in nature (175). According to

    Wittgenstein, most of the philosophical problems until his time were

    somehow imbued with language confusion and linguistic entanglement.

    Shortly after completing the Tractatus Wittgenstein realized that his picture

    theory of meaning was ill conceived and didnt really correspond with the full

    breath and scope of language possibilities and meaning. A hint of his new

    understanding and revealed so in Philosophical Investigations was that we

    should note in what context words are taught and under what rule making

    scenarios.

    Wittgensteins primary concern was how meaning is ascribed to words and in

    particular what setting it occurs under. His contribution to linguistic

    philosophy helped construct a better understanding of language and

    meaning that really didnt rely on a strict logical approach. In a primitive

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    setting such as a child learning his native language, rudimentary object/word

    connections denote a form of learning we traditionally called perceived

    knowledge. Whats important about language games is that they represent

    for Wittgenstein a different view concerning knowledge and language and

    their implications for learning and teaching.

    What is so extraordinary and what I found particularly intriguing was his

    pedagogical style: using pictures, analogies, drawings, similes, jokes, and

    dialogues with himself.

    Its as though he wants us to escape from our previous imprint of

    understanding and to relinquish the picture theory and its hold on us.

    Many modern day philosophers have used Wittgensteins technique of

    language-games to help clarify muddled or confusing terms used in

    association with movements within the field of education itself.

    In particular, analytical educational philosophers have been at the forefront

    in bringing clarity to key concepts in education. This field has proven to be

    most effective in helping to untangle linguistic conundrums and confusion

    associated with complex and abstractual concepts. In this regard,

    Wittgensteins insights into the nature of learning and meaning have shown

    to be quite useful.

    Many theorist have used Wittgensteins techniques to help improve the

    educational landscape of language. Jardine (1992) used Wittgensteins

    theory of language-games and family resemblances within a particular

    framework to reconceptualize the relationship between human beings,

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    knowledge and understanding. MacMillan (1998) illustrated an important

    use of the concept; language-games helped educators to better understand

    why students sometimes fail to learn. Other noted authors such as

    Fleener,Carter and Reader (2001) in a very similar fashion to MacMillan have

    used Wittgensteins notion of language-games to better understand the

    levels of language play between fourth grade teachers and their students.

    I think that the key to understanding Wittgensteins philosophy of language-

    games stems from the fact that he was once an elementary school teacher.

    According to Bartley (1974) Wittgensteins experience as an elementary

    school teacher led him to abandon the notion that a direct formal

    relationship between language and the world can be found.

    Instead Wittgenstein came to believe that meaning and our understanding of

    meaning was derived from the various discourses of language-games

    employed in the classroom. According to Bartley (1974), his understanding

    emerged from the experience of human engagement and the fact that

    meaning and understanding is a function of the multitude of practices that

    teachers and students engage in.

    In Investigations, Wittgenstein makes a radical conceptual leap from the

    traditional and conventional outlook on learning and its relationship to

    language to a far more different understanding of this exact same process.

    One of the key tenants of Investigations suggest that teaching should be

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    viewed as an indirect activity in which students are helped to understand the

    multi-various language-games that are part of their every day lives.

    In Investigations Wittgenstein points out that students should learn in a

    synoptic manner in which students learn about various resemblances that

    exist among concepts. Why is this point so important? In my opinion it is

    due to the fact that a teacher is often confronted with a multitude of

    backgrounds and nationalities in the classroom.

    As a result, many teachers without realizing it develop and teach in an

    indirect manner a unique form of language-games that is inherently built

    into the linguistic code of the classroom. Teachers that truly inspire and

    make a profound connection with their students play the language-game

    very well.

    So often I have found myself creating a situation of understanding and

    meaning when I allow the students to learn in a synoptic manner and not in

    the more conventional manner of logical sequence and causality.

    In such instances I often find myself creating an atmosphere of engagement

    and learning when I effectively show the varied resemblance of concepts to

    my students. When one looks deeply into Wittgensteins methodology and

    pedagogy one sees how he was trying to elucidate that by teaching in an

    indirect manner, one sees that there is no one preferred way of learning.

    The traditional westernized way of learning in a logical and sequential

    manner is often a constraint placed on many teachers and students.

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    Whether Wittgenstein is correct or not can be debated. However, in my own

    experience with urban youth of different backgrounds and cultural diversity I

    find that language-games revolving around conceptual resemblances and

    contextual utterances offer greater degrees of learning and success.

    A case in point, one of my students walks into class sporting a new tattoo

    along with a facial piercing. Constructing a dialogue with him concerning the

    tattoo in question and facilitating at the same time with an example on the

    board provides instant meaning and context as opposed to following a

    ritualistic pedagogical lesson plan with no intrinsic value to the student.

    Whether its the music in the classroom, or the conversation were having on

    his tattoo, instructional learning can occur and does occur when his world

    and my world merge and create a language-game that abides by the rules of

    the linguistic code of the school, his culture, my outlook, his outlook, and the

    rules of discourse in my classroom.

    Wittgenstein (1979) had a very good point when he said you cannot lead

    people to what is good; you can only lead them to some place or other. The

    good is outside the space of facts.

    What strikes me as relevant to this quote is that there is no one right way to

    teach one method. We cannot make explicit conclusions and believe that

    the student will always discover the proverbial good. Instead Wittgenstein

    insinuates that we should not restrict the student to one possibility, but

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    instead lead them to a variety of possibilities that can emerge from the

    activity of the language-game.

    What his forms of life and language-games helped to create can only be

    expressed as a complete shake down of our theoretical understanding

    between the realm of language and the realm of meaning. I believe that his

    insights bring greater clarity to the issues of previous theoretical discourse,

    chiefly language and understanding.

    As Wittgenstein cleverly illustrated through his pedagogy; a more precise

    understanding of language-games and an a more precise understanding of

    the difference between his philosophy and previous philosophical thought is

    the case of logical discourse.

    Logic like other concrete discourses is firmly rooted in our minds as giving

    total meaning to our world. He makes a point of noting that logic has shown

    to be ideal and unshakeable in that the strict and clear rules of logical

    structuremust be found in reality. Wittgenstein (1953).

    I think that what Wittgenstein is pursuing here might be similar to Kants

    metaphysical rose tinted spectacles. I think that in a sense their concept

    of spectacles is different in that Kant relates his metaphor to metaphysical

    origins and Wittgenstein is referring more to epistemological origins.

    Epistemological in the sense that logic has a way of making us see the world

    through a pair of spectacles that roots our beliefs in its methodical way of

    knowing.

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    Wittgenstein states that these spectacles offer a more methodized way of

    viewing the world. I tend to see a more complex and comprehensive

    relationship between language and being than just imagining that building

    knowledge sequentially and linearly offers the only way.

    As such Wittgensteins later philosophy turns out to be more of a proposal to

    understand teaching as an indirect activity rather than directed activity.

    Janik and Toulmin (1973) point out that he felt that it does no good for the

    teacher to draw conclusions for his pupils. The only thing important here

    was that the teacher lead students to a variety of possibilities that could

    emerge from their learning activities.

    Referencing back to an earlier passage in which I described Wittgensteins

    use of the analogous spectacles I would like to point out that his radical

    construction of how we learn (indirectly) is specifically tied to his

    commentary on the pair of glasses. According to Wittgenstein the purpose

    of the spectacles is to remove any sense of vaugness that has led us to

    believe that there is such a thing as a perfect construction of language.

    By using these logical spectacles we are by default to always believe that

    there is only one correct way of learning. Wittgensteins philosophy can be

    extremely difficult to follow. I cant say that I can completely agree with him

    on every point of his philosophical masterpiece. But, I must admit that the

    only reason is because I havent taken the time to digest it and reflect on the

    essential points he makes.

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    It is quite an archaic thicket of logical possibilities that leaves the reader

    bewildered as to how he intends to get to the end result. Wittgensteins

    work reminds me of Spinozas in the sense that if one can decipher some of

    their archaic language code one can reap the possibilities of enlightenment.

    However, his way of thinking was so radical that it reminds me of another

    favorite radical thinker; Albert Einstein. Just questioning the methodology of

    how we teach and learn is one thing. However, to make a convincing

    argument philosophically is quite another.

    Language-games is such a comprehensive and radical approach to

    classroom learning that to not consider it would be an educational mistake.

    His refutation of the logical spectacles was an eye opening experience that

    begged to ask: Must we always teach in the same sequential manner as we

    have over the preceding 2500 years? There is no doubt that he made an

    about-face with respect to his original masterpiece: The Tractatus. There is

    no way to know what made Wittgenstein reconsider and then reconceive his

    lifelong philosophy.

    Yes, he was in search of complete clarity per se, but not through the

    introduction of a rigid and sterilized thicket of logic. I believe Wittgenstein

    wanted us to unlearn the standard method of learning, from an old way of

    thinking to a new and more insightful way. I think that what Wittgenstein

    wanted more than anything was for us to use our imaginations when it came

    to language.

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    Teaching for Wittgenstein meant that the teacher was a participant but not

    totally responsible for ascribing meaning to a word. The connection or

    meaning was established in the given form of life. Culture, style, utterances,

    environment, conversation, sight, smell, demonstration of relational concepts

    are all part of the indirect method and all are intertwined in Wittgensteins

    world of language games.

    References

    Bartley, W. (1974). Wittgenstein (pp. 98, 126-129). London: Quarter Books.

    MacMillan, C. J. B. (1995). How Not to Learn: Reflections on Wittgenstein and

    Learning in Philosophy of Education: Accepting Wittgensteins

    Challenge, ed. Paul Smeyers and James Marshall Boston:Kluwer

    Academic Publishers.

    Marshall, J. and Peters, M. (1999). Wittgenstein: Philosophy, Postmodernism,

    Pedagogy(pp.175).Westport, CN: Bergin & Garvey

    Jardine, D. (1992). Speaking with a Boneless Tongue Bragg Creek, Alberta:

    Makyo Press.

    Fleener,M. Carter, A. and Reed, S. Language-Games in the Mathematics

    Classroom: Learning a Way of Life inJournal of Curriculum Theorizing.

    Janik, A. and Toulmin, S. (1973). Wittgensteins Vienna (pp. 228). New York,

    New York: Simon and Schuster.

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    Waismann, L. (1979). Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Vienna Circle (pp. 117).

    Oxford, England: Basil Blackwell Publisher.

    Wittgenstein, L. (1953). Philosophical Investigations (pp. 39). Oxford,

    England: Blackwell Publishing LTD.