
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2009
Pages: 379-388
Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science
ISBN (Hardback): 9781402093371
Full citation:
, "Popperian selectionism and its implications for education, or "what to do about the myth of learning by instruction from without?"", in: Rethinking Popper, Berlin, Springer, 2009


Popperian selectionism and its implications for education, or "what to do about the myth of learning by instruction from without?"
pp. 379-388
in: Zuzana Parusniková, Robert S. Cohen (eds), Rethinking Popper, Berlin, Springer, 2009Abstract
Few educationists are prepared to countenance that in learning all new expectations and other ideas are created wholly from within the individual — that is, by the learner. It is generally assumed there is some transference of information to the learner from the social or physical environment, and the processes of interpretation and construction take place after this basic information has been passively received. Karl Popper's evolutionary epistemology challenges this assumption. Most academics refuse to take Popperian selectionism seriously. Even among those who are familiar with Popper's epistemology, his characterization of learning as "imaginative criticism" goes unheeded; the critical dimension of learning is, of course, acknowledged, but not the centrality of imagination. The case for Popperian selectionism and against the idea of learning by instruction from without needs, therefore, to be restated. This is the first of two tasks addressed in the paper. The second is that of challenging most of what takes place under the banner of formal education.
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2009
Pages: 379-388
Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science
ISBN (Hardback): 9781402093371
Full citation:
, "Popperian selectionism and its implications for education, or "what to do about the myth of learning by instruction from without?"", in: Rethinking Popper, Berlin, Springer, 2009