You are on page 1of 11

634726

research-article2016
CSCXXX10.1177/1532708616634726Cultural Studies <span class="symbol" cstyle="symbol"></span> Critical MethodologiesLenz Taguchi

Article
Cultural Studies Critical Methodologies

The Concept as Method: Tracing-


2016, Vol. 16(2) 213223
2016 SAGE Publications
Reprints and permissions:
and-mapping the Problem of the sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav
DOI: 10.1177/1532708616634726

Neuro(n) in the Field of Education csc.sagepub.com

Hillevi Lenz Taguchi1

Abstract
For this article, I ask how it might be possible to study the encounter between the practices that involve the concept of
the Neuro(n) and educational practices of teaching and learning. The article aims to experiment by thinking the concept
as method. This entails the doubled and entangled movement of tracing-and-mapping the concept ofin this casethe
Neuro(n). I suggest that the contemporary obsession with the Neuro(n) in the field of education emerges from the desire
to know more about the learning subject, knowledge, and the problem of how something new comes into the world.

Keywords
concept as method, Claire Colebrook, Deleuze and Guattari, the Neuron, neurosciences and education

Introduction intimate teacherlearner relationships as well as connecting


this to the political problem of enhancing underprivileged
This article enters onto a plane of thinking on which multi- kids in inner-city schools (Cozolino, 2013; Siegel, 2012).
ple institutionalized practices, social activities, and disci- For this article, I ask myself what is produced in the cuts,
plines of knowledge production encounter and traverse each lines, and diagrammatic contours that emerge as new
other to become productive of various neuro-ontologies becomings of, for example, neuro-education, neurodidac-
(Rose & Abi-Rached, 2013). In the academy, one discipline tics, or educational-neurosciences. As the Neuro(n) is con-
after the other adds the prefix Neuro- from ancient Greek nected to other concepts, ways of thinking, and living, it
- (neuro-) as a combining form of (neuron, produces an enticing and multifaceted identity that by far
sinew, tendon, cord). By adding this cord or nerve- exceeds its scientific function as a linguistic representation
like connection between rapidly growing neuroscientific of a cell of the nervous system. Deleuze and Guattari (1994)
knowledge production and their own discipline, it is given refer to such linguistic representations of scientific func-
new stamina (sinew) and muscle (tendon): neuro- tions as functives to separate them from philosophical con-
economics, neuro-marketing, neuro-architecture, neuro- cepts. Rather than being a linguistic representation of a
education, neuro-psychology, and so on (Rose & Abi- separate material entity, the concept has an important peda-
Rached, 2013; Satel & Lilienfeld, 2013). gogical quality of shaping and enacting events of life and,
This phenomenon can be connected to what Deleuze and thus, reality itself (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994).
Guattari (1994) write on how concepts and practices link up This preliminary exercise suggests that the contempo-
with each other, support one another, coordinate their con- rary obsession with the Neuro(n) seems to emerge from the
tours, articulate their respective problems (p. 18). Even if a desire to know more about the learning subject, knowledge,
word from a discipline has a completely different history than and the problem of how something new comes into the
that of the concept of, in this case, the Neuro(n), there are, as world. This suggestion is made in a close engagement with
Deleuze and Guattari write, usually bits or components that Claire Colebrooks (2010, 2014a, 2014b) recent theorizing
come from other concepts, which correspond to other prob-
lems and presuppose other planes of thinking and practicing1 1
Stockholm University, Sweden
(Deleuze & Guattari, 1994). In the case of my own academic
discipline, education, one example is how newer theories Corresponding Author:
Hillevi Lenz Taguchi, Professor of Education and Child and Youth
of affect revitalize older psychological theories of attach-
Studies, Co-Director of the Division of Early Childhood Education,
ment. In conjunction with recent findings from affective- Department of Child and Youth Studies, Stockholm University, Frescati
neuroscientific research, it now becomes possible to propose hagvg 16B, Stockholm 10691, Sweden.
specific educational practices stressing more consistent and Email: hillevi.lenz-taguchi@buv.su.se

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
214 Cultural Studies Critical Methodologies 16(2)

that exposes the entangled relationship between the life sci- micro-political resistance, aiming to be creative of yet
ences (especially the neurosciences) and the philosophical unknown potentialities (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987). Deleuze
problem of vitalism and, thus, how to make sense of the and Guattari (1994) write that we need to beware of engag-
principles of life, the arrival of being, and how (human) life ing exclusively in critique and rather give it [the concept]
can be maintained in the face of extinction. the forces it needs to return to life (p. 28). This is why an
active experimentation that aims to make things differ
differentiationis crucial to their micro-politics (Deleuze
The Aim and Objective and Concept & Guattari, 1987). The aim to achieve transformations of
as Method in a Nutshell the realities of disadvantaged people or other agents has
How might one study the intensive events of the contempo- also been a key characteristic of the 1980s and 1990s criti-
rary encounter between education and the neurosciences? cal and feminist poststructural theories from which the
What is produced in the connections between the neurosci- presently emerging feminist New Empirical or New
ences and disciplines such as cognitive psychology, the phi- Material theorizing and research has evolved (e.g., Barad,
losophy of mind,2 social psychology, and education? In line 2007; Braidotti, 2013; Haraway, 1988; Mol, 2002).
with the recent ontological turn to what has been labeled
New Materialisms and New Empiricisms in the humanities What Is a Concept and How Do You
and social sciences (Dolphijn & van der Tuin, 2012; Lather
Make the Concept Your Method?
& St. Pierre, 2013), this article aims to experiment by think-
ing the concept as method, as suggested by Claire When Claire Colebrook (2013)4 extends an invitation to a
Colebrook (2013) and taking the Neuro(n) as its example. collective of feminist educational researchers that we
Hence, the objective of this article is to rethink qualitative might begin to think of concepts as methods, she does so
inquiry and methodology inspired by Colebrooks (2008, with the hope that researchers engaged in issues of peda-
2010, 2013, 2014a, 2014b) and Deleuze and Guattaris gogy and education might reactivate their strong disciplin-
(1987, 1994) work. ary connection to philosophy. For Colebrook, philosophy
What, then, sets New Empirical and Deleuzio-Guattarian can be seen as the modest task of a pedagogy of the con-
research apart from the critical and poststructural episte- cept (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, p. 12). This can be envi-
mologies from which they can be understood to have sioned as the pedagogical process of learning from and with
evolved? In a nutshell, this kind of research, including my the concept, by tracing its conditions of creation in ways
present take on concept as method, can be described in that can transform those conditions, and make it possible
terms of a doubled and entangled action or movement of for us to create new concepts and subsequent material-
tracing-and-mapping.3 On the one hand, this involves semiotic5 differing realities.
extracting events, problems, and concepts from the chaos of As a pedagogy, the concept no longer constitutes an
multiple realities. By tracing-and-mapping a concept abstract signifier of a phenomenon with an agreed upon
(Deleuze & Guattari, 1987), we can learn something about meaning, but is itself an act, a verb, something created from
how it has become extracted from particular events to cap- and physically lived on a specific plane of thinking (Deleuze
ture or apprehend a particular problem, as Deleuze and & Guattari, 1994). The concept captures a material-semiotic
Guattari (1994, p. 158) write. On the other hand, this move- event in an ongoing process of doing (sense making) and
ment also involves setting up and creating new events, pos- becoming (differing) in its multiplicity of inseparable varia-
sibilities, problems, and concepts for a reality to come tions, write Deleuze and Guattari (1994). It is that tempo-
(Deleuze & Guattari, 1994). The mapping aspect of tracing- rary arrest of comprehensionas the event is taken in for
and-mapping involves connecting a concept to other con- questioning if you willwhich might reconfigure the
cepts in other territories on the map. This can be done by event, the problem, and the concept itself. This is what
performing what Deleuze and Guattari (1987) call asignify- makes the concept as method possible.
ing ruptures. In the performance of this doubled movement Let me clarify by retelling bits of the example provided
of tracing-and-mapping, differentiations can be created that by Deleuze and Guattari (1994) in the chapter What Is a
might deterritorialize the concept and accomplish recon- Concept? in their book What Is Philosophy? (pp. 15-34).
figurations with the purpose of resisting normalizing prac- Deleuze and Guattari insist that thinking begins with the
tices (cf. Lenz Taguchi, 2013; Lenz Taguchi & Palmer, creation of concepts. Philosophers, such as Descartes, con-
2014; Martin & Kamberelis, 2013). struct concepts and set up their specific plane of thinking,
Thus, the doubled movement of tracing-and-mapping is which can be understood as a horizon or an abstract
not about performing a critical genealogy or discourse anal- machine that has diagrammatic, graphic, or pictorial fea-
ysis to come to know how the present has become discur- tures. These diagrams or pictures are assemblages of
sively normalized and inscribed with references to past concepts with intensive features of desiring forces that cor-
events and practices. It is rather a method of affirmative respond to a particular problem (cf. de Freitas, 2012). They

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
Lenz Taguchi 215

The enactment of reconfigurations is what sets Deleuze


and Guattaris philosophy and, at best, New Empirical
research apart from research preoccupied with understand-
ing, interpreting, representing, and critiquing (Dolphijn &
van der Tuin, 2012; Lenz Taguchi, 2013; St. Pierre et al.,
2016, in this issue. Philosophy and contemporary New
Empirical research needs to be preoccupied with reconfigu-
rations of established concepts and norms and the creation
of new possible ways of thinking and doing to produce
events that might produce social change (cf. Martin &
Kamberelis, 2013).

The Construction of the Concept of


the Neuro(n)
In the present enactment of concept as method, the
Figure 1. The diagrammatic image of Descartes I Neuro(n) is invented, fabricated, or rather created as a
Source. http://www.arasite.org/whatisphil.html.
philosophical (and pedagogical) concept for thinking
(Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, p. 5). In this section, I will show
exemplify with perhaps the most common concept of phi- how the scientific term, the neuronthe functiveis
losophy and psychology, Descartes Cogito, and the con- brought out of its scientific realm to be recreated as what
cept of Self. When Descartes constructed this concept, it Deleuze and Guattari consider a concept (Deleuze &
would reconfigure some of the available definitions up to Guattari, 1994). Whereas a functive is part of a system of
that point. He posed the problem of how a certain type of the internal logic of reference, a concept constitutes an
living relation, a relation of knowing or sensing, come to assemblage of different desiring forces that come together
appear and have a sense of itself (Colebrook, 2014b, as an abstract machine. As such, it regulates and stratifies
p. 62). He then constructed the diagrammatic image of the events such as institutionalized educational practices in a
I as a composition of other component concepts in the machinic fashion that will have very concrete and material
form of the verbs doubting, thinking, and being: consequences for the agents involved in those realities
I think therefore I amMyself who doubts, I think, I (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987).
am, I am a thinking thing (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, p. This means that concepts and functives are different in
25). Above is a copy of the diagrammatic image Deleuze nature. Sometimes, however, they intersect to affect one
and Guattari provide in their book. The Cogito condensed at another, each according to its line and plane of thinking,
point I, passing through and coinciding with its intensive as Deleuze and Guattari (1994, p. 161) emphasize. They
components: I (doubting), I(thinking), and I (being). have their own history and can thus be dated, signed, and
(Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, p. 25). baptized (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, pp. 8, 17-18). The
This assemblage constructs the concept of Cogito/Self as neuron as a function was scientifically baptized by
a subjective horizon for knowledge that always starts with Heinrich Waldeyer-Hartz in 1891 when he published the
the subject and which we immediately recognize from theo- scientific proposition that several nerve-cells linked
ries of psychology and phenomenology. When Kant later together to form a functional unit should be given the
critiqued Descartes, he set up his own plane of thinking on name of the neuron (Jacobson, 1993, p. 163). As I in this
which the Cartesian Cogito does not work without being article, in close engagement with Colebrooks (2010,
reconfigured with the component of time (Deleuze & 2014b) theorizing, construct the philosophical concept of
Guattari, 1994). What Deleuze and Guattari themselves the Neuro(n), it should instead be known as an act of thought
question as they set up their specific plane of thinking is (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994) that links together various
whether or not it is necessary to start from the point of view intensive components and material-semiotic practices of
of a subjective certainty and if thought as such be the verb different social, material, and semiotic kinds on a specific
of an I? (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, p. 27). The Cartesian socio-historical plane. This implies that the concept, as
Cogito is, however, not only the effect of a subjective I, write Deleuze and Guattari (1994) write, may take as its compo-
Deleuze and Guattari (1994), but also the always-renewed nents the functives of any possible function without thereby
event of thought (p. 24). This is an aspect of Cartesianism having the least scientific value (p. 117). Hence, the scien-
that will become a part of their own reconfiguration of the tific functive is in a specific sense highjacked and trans-
subject as, instead, a process of series of individuations lated to fit into complex assemblages to form relations
(Colebrook, 2014b; Deleuze & Guattari, 1987). with other components of the philosophical concept.6

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
216 Cultural Studies Critical Methodologies 16(2)

Tracing-and-mapping the Concept of


the Neuro(n)
The first chapter of Deleuze and Guattaris (1987) book A
Thousand Plateaus presents the enactment of tracing-and-
mapping the rhizome. The rhizome constitutes their dia-
grammatic image of reality, not unlike the drawing of the
neuron by Cajal above, as a complex, almost chaotic root
system with multiple entryways and exits and root threads
shooting off in unexpected directions. The root threads that
escape the necessary stable and regulating but sometimes
problematically stratifying and normalizing molar lines
Deleuze and Guattari (1987) call lines of flight (pp. 4-5).
Lines of flight are possible in any stratified territory in an
interdependent and co-constitutive relationship with the
striations.
Tracing-and-mapping is not about representing reality or
unraveling an explanatory logic of what is (really) going on
in this field of production. Rather, Deleuze and Guattari
(1987) think of the map as a composition of different lines
as an acentred, non-hierarchical, nonsignifying system
Figure 2. Source. Drawing by Santiago Ramn y Cajal, 1899.
(p. 21). The rhizome operates simultaneously by capturing
Neurona Purkinje. One of the largest neurons found in the
human brain.7 and stabilizing conqueststerritorializationbut just as
often it operates by offshoots, variation, differing and
expansion, or by enabling a deterritorializing transforma-
Another material component of the concept of the tion of the concept and its material-semiotic practices.
Neuro(n) is the practice and materiality of neuro-imaging. Hence, the map does not concern itself with interpreta-
Every so often newspapers and web-pages publish neuro- tion, meaning, and defining a bodys limitations or form
images to support mindboggling research-findings of every- (Lenz Taguchi, 2013, p. 713). It concerns itself with the
thing from a Hate-Circuit in the brain to show how your investigation of forces and intensities in the events as the
brain will independently cast your political vote by your sim- different lines connect, intersect, or traverse each other and
ply looking at photographs of politicians (Satel & Lilienfeld, become productive of differing (Lenz Taguchi & Palmer,
2013, p. xiii). What Satel and Lilienfeld (2013) refer to as 2014).
contemporary neuromania and seemingly mindless neu- When tracing-and-mapping the Neuro(n), we lay out and
roscience (p. xii), have been made possible thanks to new follow the lines of the rhizome on the plane of thinking
neuro-imaging techniques. However, the very first neuro- where the neurosciences connect in multiple ways to the
image was hand-drawn in the late 1890s by the Spanish his- field of education. We trace the intensities of various lines
tologist Santiago Ramn y Cajal. Cajal combined the of articulation that sometimes converge in what Deleuze
materialities and techniques of photography with his micro- and Guattari call (1987) circles of convergence (p. 11)
scopic studies of animal brains and eye cells to produce the that make up those regulating segmentary molar lines.
most magnificent and scholastic drawings of neurons. Cajals However, it might also be possible to identify a line of flight
line-drawing of a neuron above is here proposed as what that escapes the molar line to make an offshoot and estab-
Deleuze and Guattari (1994) call the face of the concept. lish itself somewhere else. The line of flight connects the
Thereby, the function of the neuron as a nerve cell with concept in one territory to another, whereby a differentia-
appendages, as Waldeyer-Hartz (1891) defines it, intersects tion takes place. The concept is thus deterritorialized. In the
with what can be seen as a diagrammatic image (cf. de chapter of the Rhizome, Deleuze and Guattari (1987)
Freitas, 2012) of the philosophical concept of the Neuro(n) in describe the practice of tracing-and-mapping in the follow-
the drawing above. The concept is expressed as a multiplicity ing diagrammatic image:
of various components as add-ons, adjuncts, assistants,
aides, secretaries, extras, appendages, or extremi- Follow the plants: you start by delimiting a first line consisting
ties forming an assemblage of a multiplicity of components. of circles of convergence around successive singularities; then
In the upcoming tracing-and-mapping exercise, I will espe- you see whether inside that line new circles of convergence
cially focus on four of these component concepts noted establish themselves with new points located outside the limits
above: embodiment, plasticity, rationality, and affect. and in other directions. (p. 11)

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
Lenz Taguchi 217

Therefore, what are some of the desiring lines of articu- question: Do you see this egg? With this you can topple
lation on this particular plane of thinking, and what are the [overthrow] every theological theory, every church or temple
major battles fought over (cf. Colebrook, 2010)? in the world. (p. 4). With this comment, he refers to both
religious and scientific convictions. He does not ask
DAlembert to observe the egg and turn that observation into
A Binary Regime of Signs: The Humanness a mathematical formula, which would be an example of clas-
of the MindHumanness Reduced to Brain sic rational thinking. Instead, Diderot asks him to see the egg
Matter following another line, aiming to a point in another direction,
outside the limits of mathematical logic. Stengers (2007)
On this particular surface where the Neuro(n) connects to edu-
notes that Diderot asks DAlembert to accept seeing the egg
cation, tracing-and-mapping will expose a battle over some
using other sensesaffect and emotionand to imagine the
fundamental requirements for educational practices: the prob-
developing embryo and the small chicken that breaks the
lem of what humanness and the brain and mind might be.
shell and comes out. The storys epistemological problem
These problems must be addressed before dealing with the
concerns whether learning is an effect of rational human
problem of how thinking and thus learning might be con-
thinking or an effect of the human subjects affective senses.
ceived. Using Deleuze and Guattaris (1987) language in this
As Stengers notes, choosing to think of learning as affective
tracing-and-mapping exercise, it is possible to spot two major
and subjective perception risks getting stuck at the other side
lines of exceptionally strong production of desiring force that
of the binary. The point here is to not accept the distinction
seem to swirl into their respective circles of convergence a
that grounds the binary.
multiplicity of successive singularities. These two circles con-
What have we put on the map so far? The Neuro(n) has
gregate a multiplicity of singular lines of thinking into two
been traced and mapped to a problem of humanness and
strong opposing molar lines that have become productive of
whether or not the human brain, mind, and Cogito/Self in
an almost passionate power-producing binary regime operat-
contemporary neuro-philosophy is understood in terms of a
ing in the contemporary humanities and social sciences.
human and brain-centered ontology or a reductive material
What we can extract from our tracing is a binary with a
eliminativism ontology of sheer brain matter. Central compo-
humanist metaphysics at one end, celebrating the unique
nents of the Neuro(n) that can be exposed in this exercise are
humanness of the mind and the self (Dennett, 2007;
the embodied mind/brain and plasticity in its interaction with
Thompson, 2010), and a humanness reduced to brain
the environment. When Stengers story about Diderots egg is
matter on the other (Clark, 2011). The former constitutes a
added on and put on the map, it connects this ontological
human bounded brain: the human is taken as the privileged
binary to the problem of epistemology and the production of
point from which life is known. The latter constitutes a
knowledge and learning. The components of rationality and
reductive materialist ontology of relations between the fir-
affect as components of the Neuro(n) are hereby provided.
ing of transmitting neurons connecting and interacting with
When we thus connect Stengers story about Diderots egg
each other and extending outside of the embodied brain
to the ontological binary sketched above, the epistemological
(Clark, 2011). The intensive force in the reductive account
binary of rationality (naturalism/positivism) vs. subjectivism
is constituted by a desire to more or less erase the human
(phenomenology/constructivism) can be put on the map in
subject and humanness (Colebrook, 2014a; 2014b). A
the territory that celebrates the unique humanness of the mind
reductive materialism converges the scientific disciplines of
and self rather than in the territory of reductive eliminativism
biology, neurology, and physics as mind, brain, and think-
and a brain of sheer matter. We add to that territory the epis-
ing reduces the Neuro(n) to sheer matter. Another less radi-
temological problem of how knowing for a human subject is
cal version is simply putting brain, body, and the world
achieved as an effect of either rational thought and/or affect
together again (Clark in Colebrook, 2014a, p. 14). This lat-
as in emotional engagement (Dennett, 2007). However, as we
ter idea of the embodied brain with its millions of interact-
shall see below, something else will happen as we perform
ing neurons that transform in relation to a world of
the move of an asignifying rupture on the map when we make
perceptions, material conditions, and affects, refers to a
another reading of Stengers story. Thereby, we follow
brain of plasticity and gene-expressions (epi-genetics).
another line and desiring force that escapes both these seg-
Isabelle Stengers (2007) shows how these major lines of
mentary molar lines and binary regimes.
articulation in fact constitute a very old Western conflict that
features dual idealist temptations: on one hand, a reductive
material eliminativism and, on the other hand, a reductive Following the Lines of the Components
humanist metaphysics. Cleverly, Stengers illustrates the
temptations of these dual desiring forces and connects them
Embodiment, Plasticity, Rationality, and Affect
to the problem of the construction of knowledge and learning In the above tracing-and-mapping, the major components
(epistemology) by telling the story about how the philoso- of the concept of the Neuro(n) are embodiment, plasticity,
pher Denis Diderot asks the mathematician DAlembert a rationality, and affect. If we understand concepts as

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
218 Cultural Studies Critical Methodologies 16(2)

intensities and centers of vibrations (Deleuze & the component of plasticity refers only to the internal plas-
Guattari, 1994, p. 23), these four components will be seen ticity of the brain in this line of convergence. This means
to resonate and interact closely with each other. In what fol- that plasticity here is not understood in accordance with the
lows, I will trace and map the lines of these components in more radical materialist and reductive line of articulation
a singular text featuring what is called neurodidactics to leaning towards the other side of the ontological binary
exemplify the collective enunciations and lines of articula- sketched above; that is, in terms of a brain extended outside
tions that form their respective circles of convergence on the human skull (e.g., Clark, 2011; Cutler & MacKenzie,
the map. 2011; Thompson, 2010). Instead, Olivestam and Ott (2010)
When the Brain Gets to Decide (Olivestam & Ott, 2010) explicitly write that their neurodidactical approach to learn-
is the title of this book that uses the prefix of the Neuro- to ing is specified as an intra-cranial field that extends the
outline how educational practices can be transformed into brain only as to be affected by social relations to other stu-
better practice when embracing knowledge from the neu- dents, the teacher and the learning-content (p. 111). In the
rosciencesto enact neurodidactics. When reading this tracing-and-mapping of the desiring forces in the theory
book, it is possible to see what Deleuze and Guattari (1994) and practices of neurodidactics, neuroscientific knowledge
mean when they write that the concept speaks the event can be understood as high jacked to converge with already
and is a function of a problem (p. 18); that is, when it does established educational practices to form new molar lines
the job of a particular problem. In this book, the concept of and segmentary practices for teachers to abide by to be
the Neuro(n) zigzags rhizomatically on a plane of already successful.
established educational theories to converge with them and
form a new stratified territory and new evidence-based The Problem of Vitalism and What Constitutes
regimes of practice. When the neurosciences encounter
these educational theories and practices, already stratified Humanness and the Arrival of Being
practices transform but are to be immediately re-stratified As already stated in the introduction, the tracing-and-
into new normalizing didactics. This is the process that mapping enacted for this article extracts a more comprehen-
Deleuze and Guattari (1987) refer to as reterritorialization. sive problem from which the Neuro(n) on this plane of
Following the intensive force of desiring production in thinking can be said to emerge. This problem concerns
this book (Olivestam & Ott, 2010), we learn that it is with vitalism as the imperative of grounding, defending or
knowledge derived from the neurosciences that we have deriving principles and systems from life as it really is, to
finally attained the evidence of behaviorisms ideas about use Colebrooks (2014b, p. 100) definition. For this article,
the importance of rewards to achieve optimal learning in the I will limit my focus to that aspect of vitalism that concerns
form of an embodied learning. However, because of the the becoming of the student as learner.
brains plasticity, this evidence should be combined with Vitalism can, according to Colebrook (2014b), be per-
established knowledge from sociocultural theory about the cived either as an active vitalism which assumes that life
importance of educational artifacts and the environment in refers to intentionally, acting, and organized bodies with
learning. Olivestam and Ott (2010) note that sociocultural limits and identities or a passive force of vitalism as a dif-
theory is similarly affected by findings from neuroscientific ferentiating field of powers without a preconceived image of
research. Cognitive theories have also been proven correct the living body.8 This passive power expresses itself in vari-
by evidence-based neuroscience. The authors show how the ous forms of, for instance, genders, so that every gender is
brain in a specific mode of rationality organizes and creates an individual actualization of a genetic and sociocultural
patterns during the learning process (Olivestam & Ott, potential for sexual differentiation of a singular event of
2010). Finally, progressivisms idea about learning by individuation (Colebrook, 2014b). Colebrook writes that a
doing, whereby both rational reasons as to why something body, as an effect of a passive vitalism, is formed through
is to be learned as well as the significance of emotional/ the sensual forces it encounters. In other words; there
affective engagement in learning are components equally would be qualities or powers to be sensed from which some-
supported by neuroscientific findings. The brain is embod- thing like a body that senses would emerge, a body being
ied and the body is embedded, as these advocates of formed from the sensual forces it encounters (Colebrook,
Neurodidactics conclude (Edelman, 2006, in Olivestam & 2014b, p. 101). The active vitalist force is constituted by a
Ott, 2010, p. 77). The validity of existing developmental synthesizing power of a human subject or a constructed sys-
and educational theories are, in this way, not only confirmed tem or idea that acts from a point of view or knowledge of
but also updated and given new stamina in their conver- the world. Contrary to this, the passive vitalist force is but
gence with neuroscientific knowledge. does not (intentionally) act. Rather, it becomes productive in
The theories of neurodidactics are clearly both material- its connections with other forces from a state of detachment
ist and reductive in character, but ontologically, they are in relation to action (Colebrook, 2014b). Colebrook (2014b)
still explicitly human-centered (anthropocentric). Hence, concludes: Whereas active vitalism would seek to return

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
Lenz Taguchi 219

political processes to the will, intent and agency of individu- of vitalism (pp. 34, 156) that aims to take us back to the
als or subjects, passive vitalism is micropolitical: it attends meaning of life as part of one ecology and system of inter-
to those differences that we neither intend, nor perceive, nor connected life from which we somehow forgot we emerged
command (p. 106). With this in mind, let us return to the (Colebrook, 2010, 2014a). Colebrook will, however, and per-
tracing of the components of the neurodidactics example haps shockingly, refer to this as ultra-humanism and even
above and trace its vitalizing forces. hyper-Cartesianism. This is because Man, she says, has
always seen himself as an environmental being who affirms
The Student as a Becoming Man himself through a material world as a sign of his proper and
profound otherness in being more than himself in this con-
Versus the Student as an Extended nection to the material world (Colebrook, 2014b). Moreover,
Mind and Material Organism the grounding of life (despite the rejection of mind) can only
Neurodidactics as an intra-cranial field perceives vitalism be discerned through human reflection. By the end of the day,
and thus the arrival of being of the student as a becoming the world and the brain as matter is still determined for and by
(Hu)Man. This student must mature to learn how to think a Hu(Man) to feel, live/perform, or linguistically determine
and represent the world in interaction with his interacting (Colebrook, 2014b).
genetic and neurological properties. Until fully developed, How, then, does such ultra-humanism converge with
this is an incomplete and lacking human being. If we recon- educational practices and to what kind of vitalism does this
nect to Stengers (2007) binary of a reductive humanisms ultra-humanism refer? With reference to findings from the
metaphysics and a reductive material eliminativism, the neurosciences, the problem of how something new comes
production of the student as a becoming (Hu)Man is to be to the world is addressed from the point of view of the
found in the territory on the map of an anthropocentric emotional brain (Damasio, 2000) and the notion, In the
humanism. It thus constitutes an active vitalism, because beginning is affect: an emotion that may or may not come to
the problem of how something new comes to the world consciousness. The self is the feeling of this event, which
can only be answered via the (Hu)Man as the grounding is also to say that the self does not end with the borders of
substance of knowing to whom the world is given the biological body" (Colebrook, 2014b, p. 12). In terms of
(Colebrook, 2014a, p. 17). That is, the world is there for a education, teaching practices, then, should be adapted to
human subject, and knowledge can only be produced by a accommodate and regulate students emotions.
human subject (Lenz Taguchi, 2013). The social-emotional force of learning is materialized as,
Let us now instead put ourselves on the map in the terri- for instance, the widely promoted idea of social-emotional
tory of the other pole of the binarya material eliminativ- learning (SEL) practices (Durlak, Weissberg, Dymnicki,
ismto explore it a bit more. In this territory, it is possible to Taylor, & Schellinger, 2011; Gormley, Phillips, Newmark,
trace the components of embodiment, plasticity, and affect to Welti, & Adelstein, 2011). Such practices focus on the social
an anti-cognitivist turn where the mind or the self is taken environment to understand how the brain is shaped by social
to emerge from life rather than being the privileged (human) relations and how we, as a consequence, can actively shape
point of view from which life is known (Colebrook, 2014b). it: human connections shape neural connections as inter-
A line of articulation of a more radical dynamism of plasticity personal neurobiology claims (Siegel, 2012, p. 3). These
suggest that we exist as the thinking beings we are, only practices engage schoolchildren in mindfulness meditation
thanks to a baffling dance of brains, bodies, and cultural and and enhance childrens self-management of emotions (Yoder,
technological scaffolding and human thought and reason is 2014). In the context of the contemporary field of Danish
born out of looping interactions with material brains, material school policy reforms, Dorthe Stauns and Malou Juelskjr
bodies and complex cultural and technological environ- have identified what they call a neuro-bio-affective manage-
ments (Clark as cited in Colebrook, 2011, p. 22). This is ment approach (Stauns, 2011). It is also materialized in new
what is sometimes referred to as anti-Cartesianism and a forms of school architecture (Juelskjr, 2014) and new ways
brain of bodily interaction (Cutler & MacKenzie, 2011). of organizing teaching and learning in relation to the stu-
In post-Cartesian neuro-philosophy, the rejection of mind dents bodily and neurological make-up (Stauns, 2011).
eventually refers to a turning back to the body and the stuff In terms of vitalism, we can see how an intentional synthesiz-
the world and we all are made of" (Colebrook, 2014a, p. 14). ing power of a human subject or a constructed system or idea
It also refers to a world and a richer expansive life from refers these practices to an active vitalism.
which [we] have become detached (ibid.). Thus, the compo-
nents of the Neuro(n) converge in the sign of the world itself Putting to Work an Asignifying
as grounding, rather than man as the grounding substance
(Colebrook, 2014a). The world as grounding can, as
Rupture
Colebrook (2014b) notes, be understood as part of a contem- Deleuze and Guattari (1987) explain that to get hold of the
porary influential line of thinking in terms of an organic form creative potentials that diverge from the segmentary molar

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
220 Cultural Studies Critical Methodologies 16(2)

lines, the tracing-and-mapping exercise needs to include repeatedly notes, a post-Cartesian move beyond man as an
enactments of asignifying ruptures. This means engaging in isolated thinker must not simply constitute a move back
a practice of estrangement by connecting to something dif- towards the body and the stuff we are already made of,
ferent or to something omitted or silenced to get away from but can instead constitute a move forward to the inorganic
taken-for-granted and common sense significations potentialities that exist now only in confused and all too
(Deleuze & Guattari, 1987). human composites (Deleuze in Colebrook, 2011, p. 26). A
Let us reread Stengers (2007) example with Diderot queer vitalist position comprises a state which is not in lack
asking DAlembert to see the egg. When Diderot asks in relation to a higher truth or essence of an all-encompass-
DAlembert to activate a mode of estrangement and follow ing nature. Rather, this is a state where the student is always
what we call a line of flight, he asks that he give the egg the in a state of differing, becoming different in herself or him-
power to challenge his well-defined categories, writes self, or what Deleuze and Guattari (1987) refers to as an
Stengers (2007, p. 4). For Stengers, this constitutes a rup- individuating process (that does not just concern human
ture in that it forces DAlembert to think outside or beyond beings). Colebrook concludes that we are nothing more
any already known categories (or temples) of thinking such than potentiality (Colebrook, 2014a, p. 12) or as she writes,
as rational scientific thinking or subjective affective rela-
tional sensing and knowing. Rather, this is a materialism No body fully knows its own powers, and can only become
that follows a line of thinking that forces us to activate an joyful (or live) not by attaining the ideal it has of itselfbeing
ethics of potentialities or political struggle by giving, in this who I really ambut by maximizing those potentialities in
case, the materiality of the egg itself the power to challenge ourselves which exceed the majoritarian, or which are not yet
actualized. (Colebrook, 2014b, p. 118)
us in unforeseen ways. With reference to Haraway (2008),
Stengers (Haraway, 2008) writes, accept seeing the egg and
accept grappling with the messiness of the world (p. 4). As part of the doubled movement of thinking the con-
Therefore, following the line of flight from this rupture, cept as method, let us set up a new event on this plane of
what might that messiness be in relation to educational thinking where the Neuro(n) connects to educational prac-
practices and how can it be understood to emerge from the tices to reconfigure that plane and the problem of vitalism.
problem of vitalism? This example concerns the event of an interdisciplinary
research event on neuroplasticity showing evidence of dif-
ferences in selective attention in children from different
The Student as Becoming-Child socioeconomic backgrounds (Neville etal., 2013; Stevens,
Thinking differently about being/becoming and difference Lauinger, & Neville, 2009). This research, a rare example
in line with Deleuze and Guattaris, Colebrooks, and New of a classical positivist experiment based on a hypothesis
Materialist and Empiricist thinking (Dolphijn & van der with very strong social justice implications, makes this
Tuin, 2012; Lenz Taguchi, 2013) can help us think the stu- event an enactment of an asignifying rupture in the present
dent not in terms of a becoming (Hu)Man or as an tracing-and-mapping of the Neuron. It is by doing research
extended mind and material organism, but instead as a in this particular paradigm, not to primarily know more
multiplicity with a diverging character always in transfor- about the brain, but with political hopes of an enactment of
mation and differentiation and becoming different in itself: the becoming-child that connects this research event to
a becoming-child (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987, pp. 232- the omitted, left out, and silenced (Deleuze & Guattari,
309). In Deleuze and Guattaris writing, the child, the femi- 1987, p. 11); that is, children in North American underprivi-
nine, and the animal constitute an instability in relation to leged housing and schooling areas.
the stable, universal (male) subject. It is the very process of In this neuroscientific intervention study, preschool chil-
thinking and becoming different from the norm (Deleuze & drens auditory attention skills were measured with EEG
Guattari, 1987). Becoming-woman, becoming-child, or (electroencephalography) before and after a period of 8
becoming-animal is, thus, understood as a counter-active weeks of social-emotional training and changes in their
thinking that has the power to transform societal and mate- school and home environments. Significant change was
rial realities (Deleuze & Guattari, 1994, p. 109). seen as a result of changes in the brain due to its plasticity.
Let us return to the ontological problem of vitalism and Changes were more significant in the children from the
how the new comes to the world. In line with the idea of groups with the lowest social economic status (Neville
the becoming-child, Colebrook suggests a queer vitalism etal., 2013; Stevens etal., 2009).
that constitutes an affirmative possibility for thinking the In this research, neuroscientists and educators collaborate
world simultaneously without the taken-for-granted idea of in unique and rare experiments performed in a micro-political
the (Hu)Man and in terms of new possible becomings with alliance with the concept of the Neuron to show the process
and as an effect of the co-construction with yet unknown of differing in its very enactment. They do this byif only
potentialities (Colebrook, 2014, pp. 100-125). As Colebrook provisionallyproviding children from underprivileged

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
Lenz Taguchi 221

families social-emotionally safer educational and home Funding


environments based on the hypothesis that this will increase The author received no financial support for the research, author-
their attention abilities and help them learn better (Neville ship, and/or publication of this article.
etal., 2013; Stevens etal., 2009). As this research event is put
on the map and temporarily captured, we can apprehend and Notes
make sense of these observed differences in the enactment of 1. From translators preface of A Thousand Plateaus (1987),
a scientific experiment in terms of a performativity of differ- The word plane designates both a plane in the geometrical
ing. In these experimentations and enactments of new kinds sense and a plan (p. xvii). The authors use it primarily in
of learning-brains-environments, children from underprivi- the first sense. Where both meanings seem to be present (as
leged communities increase their potentialities and exceed in discussions of the plan dorganisatori), plan(e) has been
what might otherwise be produced in their everyday and used in the translation.
taken-for-granted (unsafe) stratified spaces of educational 2. The philosophy of mind has, since Descartes, dealt with the
practices (Stevens etal., 2009; cf. Colebrook, 2014b). core question about the relationship between mind, brain, and
Moreover, these educational and scientific experiments can, body and between the mental and the physical. This question
if effectuated more widely, expose the becoming-child that extends into contemporary explorations of artificial intelli-
gence and trying to build a computer that might function as
becomes different in herself or himself and can thus help
the human brain. See Chalmers (2002).
fight poverty and failing democracy as effects of educational 3. Although the movements of tracing-and-mapping are dealt
practices. Hence, a queer vitalism, as I understand Colebrook with separately in Deleuze and Guattaris writing on rhizo-
(2014b, 2010), is neither completely passive nor completely matics and cartography strategies in A Thousand Plateaus,
active. Rather, it transgresses such a binary thinking and I have chosen to construct the simplified, joint expression of
relies on a complex interdependence between active and pas- tracing-and-mapping to point to the simultaneity and avoid a
sive vitalist forces. false impression of an antagonistic relationship between the
two. It is due to our tendency to get stuck in the mere critical
aspect of tracing that Deleuze and Guattari (1987) explicitly
Summing Up tell us, Make a map, not a tracing, as they outline the fifth
Inspired by Colebrooks invitation to begin to think the and sixth principles of rhizomatics: cartography (mapping)
and decalcomania (tracing; p. 12).
concept as method, I have tried to perform the doubled
4. The expression of The Concept as Method was suggested by
movement of a tracing-and-mapping exercise of this par- Claire Colebrook (2013) at an invited conference-symposium
ticular field of desiring production where the neurosciences in Stockholm, Sweden in June 2013.
connect to the philosophy of mind and educational prac- 5. I am here using Haraways (1988) concept of the materi-
tices. In this process, I have constructed the concept of the alsemiotic because I think this expression best captures
Neuro(n) and extracted the problem of vitalism from which the idea of that meaning, and matter, material, social, and
this concept has emerged on this particular map that was semiotic forces are always already entangled and co-consti-
set up for this preliminary exercise. Moreover, I have per- tutive of each other, central to New Materialisms and New
formed an asignifying rupture on this map that has made it Empiricisms theorizing.
possible for me to set up a new event, which has enabled me 6. This is exactly what Karen Barad (2007) does with concepts
to understand humanness and the learning student in a dif- from physics. They are no longer concepts of physics in her
cultural studies and feminist philosophy/theorizing.
ferent way. In this new event, neuroscientific experiments
7. This image (or other media file) is in the public domain
(Neville etal., 2013; Stevens etal., 2009) have been con- because its copyright has expired. This applies to Australia,
nected to the problem of vitalism in terms of a queer vital- the European Union, and those countries with a copyright
ism of a differential power that makes it possible for us to term of life of the author plus 70 years. http://commons.wiki-
think about childrens learning bodies as never striving media.org/wiki/File:Purkinje_cell_by_Cajal.png?uselang=s.
toward or taking on a complete or definite form or whole- 8. Vitalism here relies on Colebrooks (2014b) definition as the
ness, but always being in a creative process of individuation imperative of grounding, defending or deriving principles
that might exceed any norm, normality, or majoritarian and systems form life as it really is, (p. 100) also beyond
form of existence (Colebrook, 2014b). It is my conviction humans, which, writes Colebrook, is why also many posthu-
that this counter-active thinking about the learning subject man and anti-biopolitical models can be vitalist. Vitalism can,
can open up and transform educational realities in decisive according to Colebrook, be divided in either an active vitalism,
which assumes that life refers to acting and organized bodies.
ways.
Poststructural and posthumanist accounts of vitalism can be
active because they refer to either a language system that consti-
Declaration of Conflicting Interests tutes bodies in particular ways according to, for instance, male
The author declared no potential conflicts of interest with and female norms, or, in some posthuman accounts, the human
respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this body is seen as part of a systemic organic whole. Referring to
article. a system or body, they remain at the level of the actual and of

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
222 Cultural Studies Critical Methodologies 16(2)

active human agents (Colebrook, 2014b, p. 101). Colebrook & language (pp. 73-95). New York, NY: Columbia University
writes on the Deleuzian idea of a passive vitalism, which refers Press.
to life as virtual and thus a power without the image of the liv- Dolphijn, R., & van der Tuin, I. (2012). New materialism:
ing body. Life as a differentiating field of powers, expresses Interviews & cartographies. Ann Arbor, MI: Open Humanities
itself in various forms of, for instance, genders, so that every Press. Retrieved from http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/p/pod/
gender is an individual actualization of a genetic and social/ dod-idx/new-materialism-interviews-cartographies.pdf?c=oh
cultural potential for sexual differentiation (Colebrook, 2014b). p;idno=11515701.0001.001
However, as in all of Deleuze and Guattaris philosophy, the Durlak, J., Weissberg, R. P., Dymnicki, A. B., Taylor, R. D.,
binaries they create are created to show their co-constitutive & Schellinger, K. B. (2011). The impact of enhancing stu-
nature and the co-dependence between them. dents social and emotional learning: A meta-analysis of
school-based universal interventions. Child Development, 82,
References 405-432.
Gormley, W. T., Phillips, D. A., Newmark, K., Welti, K., &
Barad, K. (2007). Meeting the universe halfway: Quantum physics Adelstein, S. (2011). Social-emotional effects of early child-
and the entanglement of matter and meaning. Durham, NC: hood education programs in Tulsa. Child Development, 82,
Duke University Press. 2095-2109.
Braidotti, R. (2013). The posthuman. Cambridge, UK: Polity Haraway, D. (1988). Situated knowledges: The science question
Press. in feminism and the privilege of partial perspective. Feminist
Chalmers, D. J. (2002). Philosophy of mind: Classical and con- Studies, 14, 575-599.
temporary readings. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Haraway, D. (2008). When species meet. Minneapolis: University
Clark, A. (2011). Superzising the mind: Embodiment, action, and of Minnesota press.
cognitive extention. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Jacobson, M. (1993). Foundations of neuroscience. New York,
Colebrook, C. (2010). Deleuze and the meaning of life. London, NY: Plenum Press.
England: Continuum. Juelskjr, M. (2014). Changing the organization: Architecture and
Colebrook, C. (2013, June). Developing feminist post-construc- stories as material-discursive practices of producing schools
tivist qualitative research methodologies in the educational for the future. Tamara, 12(2), 25-37.
sciencesOrganized by Hillevi Lenz Taguchi, Lisa Mazzei Lather, P., & St. Pierre, E. A. (2013). Post-qualitative research.
and Anna Palmer (Discussions during and personal e-mail International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 26,
conversation after the invited conference-symposium). 629-633.
Stockholm, Sweden: Stockholm University. Lenz Taguchi, H. (2013). Images of thinking in feminist mate-
Colebrook, C. (2014a). Death of the postHuman: Essays on rialisms: Ontological divergences and the production of
extinction, vol. 1. London, England: Open Humanities Press. researcher subjectivities. International Journal of Qualitative
Retrieved from http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/p/pod/dod-idx/ Studies in Education, 26, 706-716.
death-of-the-posthuman-essays-on-extinction-volume-one. Lenz Taguchi, H., & Palmer, A. (2014). Reading a Deleuzio-
pdf?c=ohp;idno=12329362.0001.001 Guattarian cartography of young girls schoolrelated ill-/
Colebrook, C. (2014b). Sex after life: Essays on extinction, vol. 2. wellbeing. Qualitative Inquiry, 20, 764-771.
London, England: Open Humanities Press. Retrieved from http:// Martin, A. D., & Kamberelis, G. (2013). Mapping not trac-
quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/p/pod/dod-idx/sex-after-life-essays-on- ing: Qualitative educational research with political teeth.
extinction-volume-two.pdf?c=ohp;idno=12329363.0001.001 International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 26,
Cozolino, L. (2013). The social neuroscience of education. New 668-679.
York, NY: W.W. Norton. Mol, A. (2002). The body multiple: Ontology in medical practice.
Cutler, A., & MacKenzie, I. (2011). Bodies of learning. In L. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Guillaume & J. Hughes (Eds.), Deleuze and the body, Deleuze Neville, H. J., Stevens, C., Pakulak, E., Bell, T. A., Fanning, J.,
connections (pp. 53-72). Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh Klein, S., & Isbell, E. (2013). Family-based training pro-
University Press. gram improves brain function, cognition, and behavior in
Damasio, A. R. (2000). The feeling of what happens: Body and lower socioeconomic status preschoolers. Proceedings of the
emotion in the making of consciousness. New York, NY: National Academy of Science. Retrieved from www.pnas.org/
Harcourt. cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1304437110
de Freitas, E. (2012). The classroom as rhizome: New strategies Olivestam, C. E., & Ott, A. (2010). Nr hjrnan fr bestmma:
of diagramming knotted interactions. Qualitative Inquiry, 18, Om undervisning och lrandeInflytelserika didaktiska tra-
557-570. ditioner, Nyorienterande neurodidaktik [When the brain gets
Deleuze, G., & Guattari, F. (1987). A thousand plateaus: to decide: Teaching and learningInfluencial didactic tra-
Capitalism and schizophrenia (B. Massumi, Trans.). ditions, reorienting neuro-didactics]. Available from www.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. remusforlag.se
Deleuze, G., & Guattari, F. (1994). What is philosophy? (G. Rose, N., & Abi-Rached, J. M. (2013). Neuro: The brain sciences
Burchell & H. Tomlinson, Trans.). London, England: Verso. and the management of the mind. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
Dennett, D. (2007). Philosophy as nave anthropology: Comment University Press.
on Bennett and Hacker. In M. Dennet, D. Dennett, P. Hacker, Satel, S., & Lilienfeld, S. O. (2013). Brainwashed: The seductive
& J. Searle (Eds.), Neuroscience & philosophy: Brain, mind, appeal of mindless neuroscience. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016
Lenz Taguchi 223

Siegel, D. J. (2012). The developing mind (2nd ed.). New York, von Waldeyer-Hartz, W. (1891). ber inigen neuere Forshungen
NY: The Guilford Press. in Gebiete der Anatomie des Centralennervensystems,
Stauns, D. (2011). Governing the potentials of life? Interrogating Deutsche Medicinishe Wochenshrift 17.
the promises in affective educational leadership. Journal of Yoder, N. (2014). Teaching the whole child instructional
Educational Administration and History, 43, 227-247. practices that support social-emotional learning in three
Stengers, I. (2007, May 12). Diderots egg: Divorcing materialism teacher evaluation frameworks (Rev. ed.). Center on Great
from eliminativism. Radical Philosophy conference, Materials Teachers & Leaders at American Institute for Research.
and Materialisms, London, England. Retrieved from http:// Retrieved from http://www.gtlcenter.org/sites/default/files/
philpapers.org/rec/STEDED-3 TeachingtheWholeChild.pdf
Stevens, C., Lauinger, B., & Neville, H. (2009). Differences in
the neural mechanisms of selective attention in children from
Author Biography
different socioeconomic backgrounds: An event-related brain
potential study. Developmental Science, 12, 634-646. Hillevi Lenz Taguchi, PhD, (2001) Professor of Education and
Thompson, E. (2010). Mind in life: Biology, phenomenology, and Child and Youth Studies and co-director of the division of Early
the science of mind. London, England: The Belknap Press of Childhood Education, Department of Child and Youth Studies,
Harvard University Press. Stockholm University, Sweden.

Downloaded from csc.sagepub.com at FLORIDA STATE UNIV LIBRARY on April 22, 2016

You might also like