Table of Contents
Preface (Ernst von Glasersfeld) vii
List of contributors ix
Acknowledgment of sources xi
INTRODUCTION: ERNST VON GLASERSFELD'S WAY OF WORLDMAKING (Marie Larochelle) xiii
PART I: LEARNING, LANGUAGE, AND THE RADICAL THEORY
- Learning as a constructive activity 3
- Reconstructing the concept of knowledge 21
- Facts and the self from a constructivist point of view 31
- Signs, communication, and language 43
- How do we mean? A constructivist sketch of semantics 55
- On the concept of interpretation 63
- Piaget and the radical constructivist epistemology 73
PART II: THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE
- Aspects of constructivism: Vico, Berkeley, Piaget 91
- The end of a grand illusion 101
- The simplicity complex 111
- The logic of scientific fallibility 119
- The incommensurability of science and poetic wisdom 129
- Farewell to objectivity 135
- The radical constructivist view of science 143
- Cybernetics and the theory of knowledge 153
PART III: CONCEPTUAL ANALYSES
- Notes on the concept of change 173
- Abstraction, re-presentation, and reflection. An interpretation of experience and of Piaget's approach 179
- Representation and deduction 199 19 A constructivist approach to experiential foundations of mathematical concepts 205
- The conceptual construction of time 225
- Anticipation in the constructivist theory of cognition 231
- A constructive approach to 'universals' 241
PART IV: COMMENTS
- Experiences of artifacts: People's appropriations / objects' 'affordances' (Edith Ackermann) 249
- Knowledge as representation (Gérard Fourez) 259
- A constructivist account of knowledge production as a social phenomenon and its relation to scientific literacy (J. Désautels) 267
- Radical constructivism and "school mathematics" (Leslie P. Steffe) 279
POSTSCRIPT: THE REVOLUTION THAT WAS CONSTRUCTIVISM (Kenneth Tobin) 291
References 299
Index of names 313
Index of subjects 319
- Printer-friendly version
- Login to post comments