…one assumption common to many members of the family is the assumption of a separately defined
individual and environment, which must somehow match one another. Inside and outside, person and
environment are viewed as separable,
as independently definable, and then in need of being related.
Ference Marton, the leading phenomenographer, has for years criticized cognitivism for this position
(Marton, 1981).
The problem is close to that of critical realism. According to critical realism, the world out there is given
and preconstructed but nevertheless unknowable as such since we perceive it from our subjective point of
view, being active in constructing an understanding of the world, making sense of it. Like critical realism,
constructivism is situated in the tension between these poles (belief in some kind of autonomous existence of
the world out there and the individual’s subjective ordering of experiences). Yet it
is not clear that
constructivism or cognitivism manages to handle this tension successfully.
This suggests that the learning paradox might be solved in terms of how the relation between construction
and acquisition is defined. As I see it, the paradox for cognitivists emanates from the difficulty of believing
in a given world out there and at the same time constructing new knowledge about this world. It is obvious
that a stipulation allowing these two contrasting positions is needed.
Conclusion
It seems evident that cognitivists and constructivists do not always realize the following two relations
concerning the epistemological problem. On the one hand we have the relation between the physical world
and human ability to receive sense impressions of it. On the other hand we have the relation between these
sense impressions and our awareness of these impressions. As long as these distinctions are not made, the
debate will be extremely confused.
The aim of the following chapter is therefore to investigate the epistemological problem by asking the
traditional question
of epistemology, i.e. what object do we have access to in perception? I will suggest that
cognitivism accepts a dualist position concerning the relation between presentations and representations,
but a monistic position on the relation between physical objects and presentations.
COGNITIVISM AND REPRESENTATIONAL EPISTEMOLOGY
I will now try to summarize the position cognitivism represents concerning the epistemological mind-world
problem by relating it to the classical question of perception and to how the role of a scheme is understood.
The kernel of the epistemological problem can be summarized in the following question: “Which is the
real object of perception, the object in the external world or the form within the perceiver’s mind?”.
Medieval scholastics (e.g. Anselm of Canterbury) made this distinction on the basis of Aristotle’s work
(Sajama & Kamppinen, 1987, p. 12). The point was that after having been perceived, an object can be said
to exist in two ways; as a form in the mind and as a combination of form and matter in the material world.
The similarity between the real object and the mental content would then consist in the form the object has
in these realms.
No similarity, however, was to be identified with respect to the matter of the object in the
two realms. The problem can be visualized as in
Fig. 6.3
.
The answers given since have, exactly as the question presupposes, been presented in an either—or
fashion. According to the first alternative (conception A in the figure below) the perceived reality is considered
to be the object per se. Within the second answer (conception B in
Fig. 6.3
) it is the content of the subject’s
perception that is conceived.
122
SCHOOL DIDACTICS AND LEARNING
The Real Object—the Experienced Object or the Object in the World?
The information-processing approach clearly resembles the second position, i.e. that the perceiver has
access only to perceptual information provided by the senses. In accordance
with this the individual is
aware of perceptions, not of the reality as such.
The sceptics of antiquity (e.g. Sextos Empeirekos) belonged to those who first argued that what we have
access to in experience is a mental picture of an object and not external things (conception B above). The
idea was that we cannot know the things themselves, only their appearances; we can be sure that we really are
aware of a certain mental content, but we cannot be sure of a possible objective referent (“I am sure that I
see a cat, but how can I be sure that there really is a cat?”), i.e. one can be sure that there
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