The Acquisition of High Quality Experience

The search for knowledge has continued to expand to new domains since its start in the seventeenth century. Some of them have proved unusually resistant. Methods have had to proliferate to deal with the obstacles, for example in the social domain. There also have been ideological reactions. Surprisi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gerard de Zeeuw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athabasca University Press 2005-01-01
Series:Journal of Research Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jrp.icaap.org/content/v1.1/zeeuw.html
id doaj-b61d5e9d88d64fa795a655598aba035f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b61d5e9d88d64fa795a655598aba035f2020-11-25T01:35:15ZengAthabasca University Press Journal of Research Practice1712-851X2005-01-0111M2The Acquisition of High Quality ExperienceGerard de ZeeuwThe search for knowledge has continued to expand to new domains since its start in the seventeenth century. Some of them have proved unusually resistant. Methods have had to proliferate to deal with the obstacles, for example in the social domain. There also have been ideological reactions. Surprisingly frequently, methods and activities that appear to be effective in dealing with such domains are classified as “preliminary” or are distinguished by a “point of view” that has yet to be transcended to achieve “true” knowledge. One such activity is the acquisition of high quality experience. It is argued in the paper that it does not deserve being treated as a poor relative. It has a history of its own and can point to many successes, for example in the development of new values and emotions. Its only drawback seems to be that the search for high quality experiences has tended to be heuristic, or if one wishes, artistic. This situation is changing, however. In the paper the differences between the acquisition of knowledge and that of high quality experience are delineated. It is argued that facilitation of the latter’s searches requires the development of interactions between entities that generate and structure experiences--i.e., of human collectives that stabilise sufficiently to execute a collective action in their environment. They are characterised by the use of coordinating languages.http://jrp.icaap.org/content/v1.1/zeeuw.htmlhigh quality experienceknowledgecollectivesvaluesfreedom
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gerard de Zeeuw
spellingShingle Gerard de Zeeuw
The Acquisition of High Quality Experience
Journal of Research Practice
high quality experience
knowledge
collectives
values
freedom
author_facet Gerard de Zeeuw
author_sort Gerard de Zeeuw
title The Acquisition of High Quality Experience
title_short The Acquisition of High Quality Experience
title_full The Acquisition of High Quality Experience
title_fullStr The Acquisition of High Quality Experience
title_full_unstemmed The Acquisition of High Quality Experience
title_sort acquisition of high quality experience
publisher Athabasca University Press
series Journal of Research Practice
issn 1712-851X
publishDate 2005-01-01
description The search for knowledge has continued to expand to new domains since its start in the seventeenth century. Some of them have proved unusually resistant. Methods have had to proliferate to deal with the obstacles, for example in the social domain. There also have been ideological reactions. Surprisingly frequently, methods and activities that appear to be effective in dealing with such domains are classified as “preliminary” or are distinguished by a “point of view” that has yet to be transcended to achieve “true” knowledge. One such activity is the acquisition of high quality experience. It is argued in the paper that it does not deserve being treated as a poor relative. It has a history of its own and can point to many successes, for example in the development of new values and emotions. Its only drawback seems to be that the search for high quality experiences has tended to be heuristic, or if one wishes, artistic. This situation is changing, however. In the paper the differences between the acquisition of knowledge and that of high quality experience are delineated. It is argued that facilitation of the latter’s searches requires the development of interactions between entities that generate and structure experiences--i.e., of human collectives that stabilise sufficiently to execute a collective action in their environment. They are characterised by the use of coordinating languages.
topic high quality experience
knowledge
collectives
values
freedom
url http://jrp.icaap.org/content/v1.1/zeeuw.html
work_keys_str_mv AT gerarddezeeuw theacquisitionofhighqualityexperience
AT gerarddezeeuw acquisitionofhighqualityexperience
_version_ 1725067525133172736