Research Catalog

The necessity of experience

Title
  1. The necessity of experience / Edward S. Reed.
Published by
  1. New Haven : Yale University Press, ©1996.
Author
  1. Reed, Edward (Edward S.)

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FormatBook/TextAccessUse in libraryCall numberBF318.5 .R44 1996Item locationOff-site

Details

Description
  1. ix, 188 pages; 22 cm
Summary
  1. Primary experience, gained through the senses, is our most basic source for understanding reality and learning for ourselves. Our culture, however, favors the indirect knowledge gained from secondary experience, in which information is selected, modified, packaged, and presented to us by others. In this controversial book, Edward S. Reed warns that second-hand experience has become so dominant in our technological workplaces, schools, and even homes that primary experience is endangered. Reed calls for a better balance between firsthand and secondhand experience, particularly in our social institutions. He contends that without opportunities to learn directly, we become less likely to think and feel for ourselves.
  2. Since the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century, Western epistemological tradition has rejected primary experience in favor of the abstractions of secondhand experience. Building on James Gibson's concept of ecological psychology, Reed offers a spirited defense of the reality and significance of ordinary experience against both modernist and postmodernist critics. He expands on the radical critiques of work, education, and art begun by William Morris and John Dewey, offering an alternative vision of meaningful learning that places greater emphasis on unmediated experience, and he outlines the psychological, cultural, and intellectual conditions that will be needed to foster that crucial change.
Subject
  1. Experiential learning
  2. Experience
  3. Human information processing
  4. Schemas (Psychology)
  5. Mental Processes
  6. 08.36 philosophical anthropology, philosophy of psychology
  7. Experience
  8. Experiential learning
  9. Human information processing
  10. Informationsverarbeitung
  11. Lernen
  12. Erfahrung
  13. Wahrnehmung
  14. Erfahrungsorientiertes Lernen
  15. Ervaring
Contents
  1. Prologue: A Plea for Experience -- 1. Have You Ever Been Experienced? Philosophy Meets the Real World -- 2. The Search for a Philosophy of Experience -- 3. Fear of Uncertainty and the Flight from Experience -- 4. The Degradation of Experience in the Modern Workplace -- 5. Sharing Experience -- 6. Experience and Love of Life -- 7. Experience and the Birth of Hope -- Epilogue: Fighting for Experience.
Owning institution
  1. Princeton University Library
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-183) and index.