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2014 | 5 | 1 | 65 – 89

Article title

ON THE PREGNANCE OF BODILY MOVEMENT AND GEOMETRICAL OBJECTS: A POST-CONSTRUCTIVIST ACCOUNT OF THE ORIGIN OF MATHEMATICAL KNOWLEDGE

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Traditional (e.g., constructivist) accounts of knowledge ground its origin in the intentional construction on the part of the learner. Such accounts are blind to the fact that learners, by the fact that they do not know the knowledge to be learned, cannot orient toward it as an object to be constructed. In this study, the author provides a phenomenological account of the naissance (birth) of knowledge, two words that both have their etymological origin in the same, homonymic Proto-Indo-European syllable ĝen-, ĝenə-, ĝnē-, ĝnō-. Accordingly, the things of the world and the bodily movements they shape, following Merleau-Ponty (1964), are pregnant with new knowledge that cannot foresee itself, and that no existing knowledge can anticipate. The author draws on a study of learning in a second-grade mathematics classroom, where children (6–7 years) learned geometry by classifying and modelling 3-dimensional objects. The data clearly show that the children did not foresee, and therefore did not intentionally construct, the knowledge that emerged from the movements of their hands, arms, and bodies that comply with the forms of things. Implications are drawn for classroom instruction.

Keywords

Year

Volume

5

Issue

1

Pages

65 – 89

Physical description

Contributors

  • University of Victoria, Applied Cognitive Science, MacLaurin Building A557, Victoria, BC, V8W 3N4, Canada

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-cff84b93-fddd-455b-8fcc-3b0a2aa9ec81
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