A surprisingly Radical Centrist take on education reform (and philosophy).

> He refers to this as the thermostatic conception of education, and one 
> wonders how it might apply if expanded beyond education to philosophy as a 
> whole. The role of thermostats is to “trigger opposing forces.”  If it’s too 
> hot, a thermostat will trigger cooling. If it’s too cold, a thermostat will 
> trigger heat. “The thermostatic view of education is, then, not 
> ideology-centered. It is balance-centered. It is not so much a philosophy as 
> it is a metaphilosophy – a philosophy about philosophies. Its aim is at all 
> times to make visible the prevailing biases of a culture and then, by 
> employing whatever philosophies of education are available, to oppose them. 
> In the thermostatic view of education, you do not ‘hold’ philosophies. You 
> deploy them.”
> 


http://www.partiallyexaminedlife.com/2013/04/13/the-not-school-discussion-of-neil-postmans-amusing-ourselves-to-death/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+partiallyexaminedlife%2Fblog+%28The+Partially+Examined+Life+Blog%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

The Not School discussion of Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death


Courtesy of neilpostman.org

In the first week of the “Not School” group devoted to Neil Postman’s Amusing 
Ourselves to Death, it’s clear that a tension runs through the book that – with 
only a little bit of investigation – can be seen running through Postman’s 
entire career. It’s a function of what he called the “thermostatic view.”

“In the thermostatic view …  you do not ‘hold’ philosophies. You deploy them.”

On the one hand, Postman is a visionary rhetorician and communications 
progressive. His ideas are firmly based in Marshall McLuhan and Alfred 
Korzybski but he synthesizes these and others into the coherent system 
encapsulated as Media Ecology. On the other hand, Postman is also kind of a 
conservative crank. He isn’t watching the shift in media from a typographic 
culture to an image culture with the disinterested fascination of an 
anthropologist. He’s watching it with the dread of an extremely perceptive and 
articulate prophet, lamenting the end of typographic days. On the one hand, he 
revels in the urge of the Enlightenment to construct and discover knowledge via 
free, clear thinking and promiscuous inquisition. On the other hand, he is 
appalled by the way in which free, clear thinking and promiscuous inquisition 
have led to a society that abandons the mechanics – linear argument, 
typographic culture – which undergird the Enlightenment urge!

This shift from progressive ideal to conservative did not develop as Postman 
grayed.  This isn’t a case of the young idealist growing up and suddenly 
noticing the kids on his lawn. The tension was seen as early as 1979, in 
Postman’s second education masterwork, Teaching as a Conserving Activity. 
Postman’s first education masterwork was Teaching as a Subversive Activity. 
Frisson, anyone?

In Teaching is a Subversive Activity, Postman issued his jeremiad (“the 
survival of our society is threatened”) in favor of radical implementation of 
constructivist pedagogy in the youth oriented culture of the late 1960s. It’s 
the adults and adult society who are the problem, educational structures, the 
locus of expertise, and the utter enslavement of students within the system. 
The hierarchical elitism of the educational system is neither healthy nor 
justified nor even helpful.

Teaching is a Conserving Activity is also a jeremiad. Society is still 
threatened, but this time by the very revolutionaries Postman inspired before. 
In the prior book, Postman argued that students should be allowed to study what 
fascinates them. They should have agency in decisions made around their 
education. In Conserving he argues that a student’s natural fascination (and 
inclined to explore on their own) is exactly what they should not be studying 
in school. Why does school need to mirror the puerile fascinations of 
“culture?” The energies of school should be spent teaching knowledge and skills 
that students wouldn’t come to naturally through their own interests. In 
Subversive, Postman rails against the oppressive elitism of educational 
structures over the students. In Conserving, he argues that elitism is a 
natural and inevitable – and desirable – quality of the educational project. By 
definition, educators are saying, “You, student, could stand to be improved, 
and I’m the one to do it.”

Schools should not, in other words, be responsive, welcoming, or servile in the 
face of change, but should be bulwarks against it. Schools should be the high 
point from which to watch the flood. “Progress is not the school’s most 
important product,” he writes, “Without a counterargument to the overwhelming 
thesis of change, we can easily be swept away – in fact, are being swept away.”

Is this shift hypocrisy? It doesn’t seem so. After this shift to Conserving, 
the The Enlightenment continues to run through Postman’s oeuvre as the era sine 
qua non, but the tension between emulating the Enlightenment and deifying it 
remains live even in his last book, Building a Bridge to the 18th Century. It 
is a tension to be negotiated, not solved.

Postman argues, in Conserving, that the tension is inherent in the conversation 
of the philosophy of education. The tension, he writes, is the frame through 
which education philosophy should be viewed over time. He is arguing for the 
supremacy of context (“from an ecological view, nothing is good in itself”). 
Schools, he says, should be correctives to society’s normative urges. “Where … 
a culture is stressing autonomy and aggressive individuality, education should 
stress cooperation and social cohesion. Where a culture is stressing 
conformity, education should stress individuality.”

He refers to this as the thermostatic conception of education, and one wonders 
how it might apply if expanded beyond education to philosophy as a whole. The 
role of thermostats is to “trigger opposing forces.”  If it’s too hot, a 
thermostat will trigger cooling. If it’s too cold, a thermostat will trigger 
heat. “The thermostatic view of education is, then, not ideology-centered. It 
is balance-centered. It is not so much a philosophy as it is a metaphilosophy – 
a philosophy about philosophies. Its aim is at all times to make visible the 
prevailing biases of a culture and then, by employing whatever philosophies of 
education are available, to oppose them. In the thermostatic view of education, 
you do not ‘hold’ philosophies. You deploy them.”

Thanks to the Amusing Ourselves to Death ”Not School” group for sparking these 
thoughts. You folks are fantastic! (New people can still join up!)

Gary Chapin


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