Useful Knowledge and Beautiful Knowledge in Dewey and Thoreau
Abstract
:The problem of the educator is to engage pupils in these [occupational] activities in such ways that while manual skill and technical efficiency are gained and immediate satisfaction found in the work, together with preparation for later usefulness, these things shall be subordinated to education—that is, to intellectual results and the forming of a socialized disposition. What does this principle signify?—John Dewey, Democarcy and Education [1] (p. 204)
1. Introduction: The Crisis of the Humanities in Higher Education
2. The “Global Resurgence of Pragmatism” and the Real Use of Democracy and Education Today
2.1. “The Global Resurgence of Pragmatism”
2.2. From Bernstein to Dewey: Democracy and Education Revisited
The problem of the educator is to engage pupils in these activities [as outdoor excursions, gardening, cooking, sewing, printing, book-binding, weaving, painting, drawing, singing, dramatization, story-telling, reading and writing, etc.] in such ways that while manual skill and technical efficiency are gained and immediate satisfaction found in the work, together with preparation for later usefulness, these things shall be subordinated to education—that is, to intellectual results and the forming of a socialized disposition.[1] (p. 204)
Dewey here italicizes the word “education” to signify that “usefulness” should have humane purpose in service to human growth. At the same time, such idealism should be grounded on the reality of human and humane experience.The more human the purpose, or the more it approximates the ends which appeal in daily experience, the more real the knowledge.[1] (p. 206)
Interdisciplinary in nature, then, humanistic studies should not be taught as “isolated subjects” but should be connected with the pupils’ experience [1] (p. 295). Democracy and Education, thus, is a book that enables us to rethink the future of humanities, or to put it in more Deweyan terms, on human science. What he means by “humane study” is not geared towards aristocratic liberal arts: rather humanistic studies involve the more down-to-earth, daily experiences of human beings.With respect then to both humanistic and naturalistic studies, education should take its departure from this close interdependence. It should aim not at keeping science as a study of nature apart from literature as a record of human interests, but at cross-fertilizing both the natural sciences and the various human disciplines such as history, literature, economics, and politics.[1] (p. 294)
Liberal arts should not only be integrated studies with natural sciences: they also should be integrated with vocational studies in its focus on experiment, use, and practical ends [1] (p. 269). This is the wisdom of non-elitist American philosophy.[M]any a teacher and author writes and argues in behalf of a cultural and humane education against the encroachments of a specialized practical education, without recognizing that his own education, which he calls liberal, has been mainly training for his particular calling.[1] (p. 322)
This envisions an alternative conception of education—“a change in the quality of mental disposition—an educative change” [1] (p. 326). We might call this growth human transformation in service to life as a whole. Education in this broad sense is not to be assimilated into the existing currency of the economy, but, instead, functions as its critical force. Thinking through praxis does not allow us to loosen the grip of thinking: rather, thinking in life requires of us rigorous thinking: “Intellectual responsibility means severe standards in this regard. These standards can be built up only through practice in following up and acting upon the meaning of what is acquired” [1] (p. 186).The two distinctions, psychological and political, translated into educational terms, effected a division between a liberal education, having to do with the self sufficing life of leisure devoted to knowing for its own sake, and a useful, practical training for mechanical occupations, devoid of intellectual and aesthetic content.[1] (p. 270)
3. Thinking beyond Problem-Solving: From Democracy and Education to Art as Experience
3.1. Twilight Zone of Inquiry
Here he indicates that the revealing of the world is closely related to the gradual finding of the way—being provisional and non-permanent, like the work of the foresters.At most intelligence but throws a spotlight on that little part of the whole which marks out the axis of movement. Even if the light is flickering and the illuminated portion stands forth only dimly from the shadowy background, it suffices if we are shown the way to move.[11] (p. 180)
3.2. From Democracy and Education to Art as Experience
Beauty is truth, truth beauty—that is allYe know on earth, and all y need to know.—Keats quoted by Dewey [5] (p. 40)
4. Towards an Economy of Beautiful Knowledge
When the future arrives with its inevitable disappointments as well as fulfillments, and with new sources of trouble, failure loses something of its fatality, and suffering yields fruit of instruction not of bitterness. Humility is more demanded at our moments of triumph than at those of failure.[11] (p. 200)
Integrating body, mind, and language, and doing this more robustly than Dewey, Thoreau redeems the economy of living, in what he calls “higher knowledge” or “Sympathy with Intelligence” [6] (p. 113).To be a philosopher is not merely to have subtle thoughts, nor even to found a school, but so to love wisdom as to live according to its dictates, a life of simplicity, independence, magnanimity, and trust. It is to solve some of the problems of life, not only theoretically but practically.[28] (p. 9)
This reminds us of the Socratic idea of ignorance, and yet, in Thoreau’s case, and in American philosophy in general, an emphasis is put more on praxis—on the common and on daily experience, as exemplified by Thoreau’s labor in the bean field at Walden. It is only through such down-to-earth practice that the moment of rebirth, what may be called transcendence in the ordinary, occurs. Beautiful Knowledge is anything but the object of a direct perception under clear sunlight. As it cannot be obtained in the glare of sunlight, it is important that it is not anticipated in the form of direct, immediate knowledge—under “an excess even of informing light” [6] (p. 111). Being “transformational rather than informative” [29] (p. 78), Beautiful Knowledge is not the target of learning or the product of direct acquisition, but something that is experienced in the re-vising of the necessities of life. Dewey’s Art as Experience at least points us to such Beautiful Knowledge.We have heard of a Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. It is said that knowledge is power; and the like. Methinks there is equal need of a Society for the Diffusion of Useful Ignorance, what we will call Beautiful Knowledge, a knowledge useful in a higher sense.[6] (p. 112)
Beyond the dichotomy of the natural (the wild) and the human (the civilized), and far from intellectualism and anti-intellectualism, Thoreau proposes that we regain the untamed, self-reliant power of thinking and reading as a distinctive capacity of the human. This is the education for the wild duck, not for excellent sheep.It is the uncivilized free and wild thinking in “Hamlet” and the “Illiad,” in all the Scirptures and Mythologies, not learned in the schools, that delights us. As the wild duck is more swift and beautiful than the tame, so is the wild—the mallard—thought, which ‘mid falling dews wings its way above the fens’.[6] (pp. 102–103)
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Saito, N. Useful Knowledge and Beautiful Knowledge in Dewey and Thoreau. Educ. Sci. 2017, 7, 59. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci7020059
Saito N. Useful Knowledge and Beautiful Knowledge in Dewey and Thoreau. Education Sciences. 2017; 7(2):59. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci7020059
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaito, Naoko. 2017. "Useful Knowledge and Beautiful Knowledge in Dewey and Thoreau" Education Sciences 7, no. 2: 59. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci7020059
APA StyleSaito, N. (2017). Useful Knowledge and Beautiful Knowledge in Dewey and Thoreau. Education Sciences, 7(2), 59. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci7020059