mercoledì 21 maggio 2014

Tao Paradoxico-Philosophicus 20-22



    Un dieu donne le feu     
     Pour faire l'enfer;      
      Un diable, le miel     
       Pour faire le ciel.  
   



TRACTATUS PARADOXICO-PHILOSOPHICUS

20 Education: consider observers attempting to develop thinking and conversation and thus making themselves unpredictable with respect to each other.
20.01 Education improves the ability to offer tentative distinctions and interactions, increasing the number of choices available to observers.
20.02 All the observers can pursue and achieve an education as long as they avoid competition, since it begins by excluding thinking and soon it omits conversation.
20.1 Observers may educate themselves and stimulate others to do likewise, as long as they understand uncertainty as welcomed and unavoidable.
20.2 A non-hierarchical society breeds rule-pondering observers thus stimulating the generation of dynamic stabilities and instabilities and avoiding the dehumanizing static or dynamic stabilities, a healthy recursion.
20.21 In this context, human diversity of interests, curiosity, inventiveness, creativity, ingenuity, emotions, feelings, etc., flourish unrestricted.
20.3 Education stimulates individual knowledge, thinking, conversation, paradoxes and logic, unpredictability, wisdom and legitimate questions, questions to which none of the concerned knows the answers.



21 Idleness: contemplate the art neither of following rules nor of not following rules and the art of following rules and not following rules.
21.01 Education contemplates idleness to stimulate thinking and conversation among observers, and to nourish their original uncertainty and unpredictability.
21.1 Paradoxical observers welcome idleness and education, offer tentative distinctions (logic) and interactions (paradoxes), and do not form hierarchies.
21.2 A hierarchy welcomes neither idleness nor education.
21.3 If observers ponder rules and attempt to think and converse they will find life difficult, if not impossible, within hierarchical societies.
21.31 These societies appear as prisons to observers in search of education and idleness.



22 Reality”: consider a simple environment that, chosen (distinguished) by logical observers, excludes the observers.
22.1 From this point of view, “reality” should conform to some immutable pattern that will require neither more distinctions nor interactions nor choices.
22.2 However, every pattern adopted needs adjustments here and there to eliminate contradictions, to “solve” paradoxes, etc.
22.3 Since logical observers can neither adjust a pattern nor offer a new one, they attempt to induce or coerce reluctant paradoxical observers to do it.
22.4 Paradoxical observers either hide and isolate themselves or develop different avenues (e.g., philosophies, the arts, logics, mathematics, the sciences, etc.) to assuage the demands for a goal that they do not desire.
22.5 Invading hierarchies of logical observers under different guises make of these avenues instruments for instruction.
22.6 Many paradoxical observers surrender to these instruments and abandon their education, their curiosity, inventiveness, creativity, etc.

Tractatus Paradoxico-Philosophicus

A Philosophical Approach to Education
Un Acercamiento Filosófico a la Educación
Une Approche Philosophique à l'Education
Eine Philosophische Annäherung an Bildung

Ricardo B. Uribe

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Tao Paradoxico-Philosophicus 17-19

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