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Running head: Inquiry, Social Change, and Implications for Art Educational Research 1
Foundations of Educational Research & Doctoral Scholarship I [EDUS 702]
Inquiry, Social Change, and Implications for Art Educational Research
Written Response Three
3/27/2017
Kyle Guzik
Virginia Commonwealth University
Response Three 2
Theory of Social Change and Approach to Inquiry
To develop my theory of social change I begin with the propositions that support my approach to
inquiry. Rather than delineating a theory of social change and then an approach to inquiry it
informs (or vice versa), I will attempt to examine these concepts simultaneously to emphasize
my perspective on their intertwined nature. The Hegelian dialectic is a useful logical model and
is also important in explanations of social events. In argumentation, first, one proposes a thesis,
which is a claim. In sociology, a thesis is a given event that occurs and affects humanity. The
antithesis is the response to the thesis; it is a reaction that contradicts the thesis. An antithesis
may be considered the cultural response to an event. Synthesis is the integration of the thesis and
antithesis. A generic example of a sociocultural dialectic process might include resolution by a
population of tensions initiated by a natural disaster. A hypothetical sequence from dialectical
materialism could include instigation of a cultural event by one population, leading to
counteraction by another, with a final reckoning occurring between populations.
The Hegelian dialectic implies phenomenological consequences. These consequences involve
the nature of subjectivity, idiosyncratic experience unique to an individual:
This Dialectic, which unsettles all particular judgements and opinions,
transmuting the Evil into Good and Good into Evil, left at last nothing remaining
but the mere action of subjectivity itself… – Thought. Thought contemplates
everything under the form of Universality, and is consequently the impulsion
towards and production of the Universal (Hegel, 1899, p. 438).
Hegel reflected upon contradictions in Jesuit ideology. The Roman Catholic Church developed
the Society of Jesus to resist the Protestant Reformation. Therefore, Jesuit argumentation
developed with the goal of aggressively proving specific claims. Judgement and opinion became
irrelevant because only one interpretation of any evidence could exist, that endorsed by the
Roman Catholic Church. Contradictions appear because without interpretation, the distinction
between good and evil becomes unclear. Elimination of opinion and judgement extinguished
hermeneutics and left only phenomenology, subjective experience. For Hegel, cognition is
subjectivity. Thought is the integration of sensory data with an individual’s mental constructs.
This conceptual framework can be considered universalist in that it is a form of monism, an
umbrella term for attributions of oneness. In my approach to inquiry, I use objectivist
epistemology (Rallis & Rossman, 2012). However, I do not presume that objectivist
epistemological claims should be accepted axiomatically. I am concerned with rational inquiry
that yields insight into causal explanations of the natural world. However, problems remain:
[I]t must be observed that the unity of Thought with its Object is already
implicitly present [i.e. in the fundamental constitution of the Universe]. For
Reason is the substantial basis of Consciousness as well as of the External and
Natural. Thus, that which presents itself as the Object of Thought is no longer an
absolutely distinct form of existence (Hegel, 1899, p. 439).
Universalist explanations that employ reason to link consciousness with the natural world that
exists external to the subjective observer are of the same category (monism) as universalist
Response Three 3
theological explanations. This is the crux of critiques involving charges of scientism, that
empiricism is a form of secular religion. This becomes apparent in Aguste Comte’s (1899)
origination of the modern formulation of positivism. Comte describes positivism as an extension
of the Deism promulgated by Founding Fathers of the United States such as Benjamin Franklin.
Deism supposed, or posited, the existence of a supreme being. However, this being acted only as
a prime mover and ceased interference with causality after creating the universe. Comte’s (1899)
description of positivism employs a similar casuistry evident in the Jesuit tradition in which
theoretical rules derived from past instances apply to future instances:
[Positivisme] dans des vues d'abord scientifiques, y voit maintenant la source de
la solution sociale d'après la fondation d'un véritable pouvoir spirituel, capable de
concilier radicalement l'ordre et le progrès. La plénitude et la gravité de cette
nouvelle adhésion résultent de son harmonie spontanée avec le fond de la
situation Américaine où les vrais conservateurs se sentient près d’être écrasés par
de redoutables niveleurs, contre lesquels ils ne voient d’autre ressource
systématique que dans la religion démontrée qui caractérise le positivisme (p.
216).
Positivism was a “social solution” implemented by “real conservatives” (the Founders) to resist
the frightening potential of the American Revolution to cause socioeconomic equality, a
possibility they viewed as an existential threat (Comte, 1899, p. 216). Comte (1899) claims that
the Founders viewed positivism as a “systematic resource” because it was a “demonstrated
religion” that could restore hierarchical control via “true spiritual power” (p. 216). Consider the
dialectical nature of this process. The succession of the Thirteen Colonies from Great Britain
generated a thesis of social instability. The political aristocracy who participated in the
Continental Congress required a new form of social control consistent with American
Enlightenment dogma. Comte describes this system (the antithesis developed by the colonial
oligarchy to American revolutionary social instability) as positivism. The framing of the
Constitution of the United States might be considered a synthesis of these sociocultural forces.
Contradictions remain in my argument for objectivist epistemology. I have a naturalistic
worldview free from supernatural and mystical elements. I find the Hegelian dialectic appealing
in its explanatory power of societal change because of its congruence with materialism and
physicalism. One may align Comte’s account of positivism within a dialectical framework. Yet,
both the Hegelian dialectic and Comte’s positivism can be considered forms of monism. They
are concerned with unified explanations. Religions might also be considered another form of
monism in that they each provide one explanation for events and the nature of reality. However,
one formulation common to religions is the existence of an immaterial soul. This construct
distinguishes the monism evident in Hegel and Comte’s ideas with a creeping dualism in
theology. Dualism is the view that there are two mutually irreducible, ontologically distinct
forms of phenomena and/or substance. The proposition of an immaterial soul is a form of mind-
body dualism. It is also conceivable that religions could involve pluralism, in which there are
multiple ontologically distinct items such as heaven, hell, reincarnation, karma, spiritual or faith-
based phenomena, and deities. In this conception, the soul is a form of consciousness that exists
independently from the natural world. Inside this soul mental events can occur, which are
distinct from physical events in objective reality. Unlike theology, dialecticism and positivism
Response Three 4
do not require mental and physical dualism specifically, regardless of whether other forms of
dualism can be identified in the latter two constructs.
Psychophysical reductionism is another form of monism, which supports the empirical basis of
my approach to inquiry and theory of social change. My operational definition of
psychophysical reduction is that material, physical evidence supports psychological claims, and
ultimately, this evidence is the only support for these claims. Critics of psychophysical reduction
complain that it limits the choices researchers can make when developing special science
theories. This is a mistake. As a prerequisite, this argument concedes that the special sciences
ground claims in the psychological and social sciences. Reductionist methodology does not
constrain or regulate theory choice in the special sciences. Explanations from special sciences
such as chemistry, biology, and neuroscience ultimately reduce theoretically to fundamental
physics.
Biclle (1996) proposes that “as successful development occurs in both psychology and
neuroscience, psychological theories will come to stand in the reduction relation… to counterpart
neurobiological theories” (p. 62). These neurobiological theories have also had counterparts in
basic physics. Thus, in this chain of causal reasoning psychology is linked to neurobiology,
which is linked to physics. This view supposes that the role of philosophy is to assimilate and
adapt knowledge from the natural sciences to the present volume of philosophical discourse.
Philosophy can be considered an applied science, or technology. In addition, psychology and
neurobiology are perceived as in development. Researchers in these fields continue to propose
new questions and explanations, which evolve subject to empirical verification. As long as this
development continues to occur there is no restriction on the theoretical choices available to
researchers.
While the motivation for the development of positivism may have been to reestablish social
hierarchical control, contemporary theorists need not grate at the possibility that their social
research is somehow less than, or even ontologically distinct from basic research. Instead
anthropology, psychology, biology, physics, etc. can be viewed as heuristic approaches with
different levels of resolution in reductionist methodology. Consider a continuum in sociology
regarding the regulation of social change, between predictable progression and radical
transformation (Rallis & Rossman, 2012, p. 33). A description of periods of stasis interrupted by
profound alterations could be applied to the concept of cultural revolution in societal
development, or to the concept of punctuated equilibria in evolutionary biology. Cultural events
are subject to physical events. Examples include changes in population size, meteorological
phenomena, DNA replication errors, and variation in background radiation due to cosmic ray
events as well as geological distribution of radioactive elements. Cultural events are also subject
to technological changes, including inventions, such as iPhones, arrowheads, forge welding,
cuneiform tablets, or monotheism. Parallels can be drawn between different areas of research
and identification of these interrelationships expand human knowledge.
Trustworthy Research
Rallis and Rossman (2012) describe the scientific method as a “systematic inquiry cycle” (p. 46).
The scientific method requires the following fundamental steps:
Response Three 5
• [First scientists are] curious and ask a question;
• Construct a hypothesis;
• Observe and collect data or test the hypothesis by doing an experiment;
• Analyze the data and draw a conclusion;
• Communicate results; and
• Repeat or replicate the experiment (Rallis & Rossman, 2012, p. 46).
Systematic inquiry helps researchers demonstrate the trustworthiness of their research studies.
When developing hypotheses, researchers should relate their work to relevant theory. Extensive
review of the background literature surrounding a given problem helps researchers to increase the
specificity of their questions, identify what is already known and what research approaches have
already been attempted, and provide support for the construct validity of research methodologies
used in their research. Research that conforms to the systematic inquiry cycle is subject to peer
review. In order to collaborate with scientific peers, researchers should propose hypotheses that
are verifiable with empirical evidence. A research hypothesis should also be falsifiable in that
evidence could conceivably be collected or arguments could be made that would lead researchers
to reject the hypothesis. Literature review can help a researcher construct a falsifiable claim.
Literature review can also help a researcher avoid the logical fallacy of the argument from
ignorance, the incorrect belief that a claim is true if it has not been proven false, or that a claim is
false if it has not been proven true. Attention to extant literature can help scientists establish initial
confidence in their methods of inquiry by demonstrating to potential reviewers that the scientist
has given consideration to the concerns of the learning community that has previously explored
and is interested in the subjects and fields related to their research.
Dissertation Research and Conceptions of Trustworthiness
For my dissertation, I will conduct research in art education. My understanding of what that
statement means continues to evolve. My plan has been to conduct recordings and from these
render transcripts during observations of art teachers and students under various instructional
settings. I would then subject those transcripts to some form of statistical analysis and make
causal claims. One problem with this approach is that it is quantitative, lexical, and conceptual.
These approaches investigate an incomplete construct of visual language. Lexical
communication could be considered irrelevant to research in visual language, in that it is
contradictory to investigate visual ideas with written language. A work of art might be the best
response to another work of art. Redundant quantitative analysis of art instruction could be used
to impose a new regulatory framework on art teachers or to destroy what many students enjoy
most about art classes. In defense of my plans, one of my goals would be to better understand
intentionality in the human mind. I do not buy into the statement attributed to Warhol that “art is
anything you can get away with,” and I would not apply this notion to my dissertation research.
However, I accept the premise that anything can be art; and therefore, also, everything is art. For
this reason, I believe that art cannot be created; it can only be found in nature. Because of this,
in order for my dissertation research to be trustworthy it must investigate questions authentic to
the field of art education. To me, art education seems more concerned with finding art (and
artists) rather than attempting to create it (and them). In addition, to me, art educational questions
concern the natural world and objective reality. Reductionist methodology seems to me to be the
most honest way to address these questions.
Response Three 6
References:
Biclle, J. (1996). New wave psychophysical reductionism and the methodological
caveats. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 56(1), 57-78.
Comte, A. (1903). Correspondance inédite dʹ Auguste Comte. Paris, FR: Au Siège de la
Société Positiviste.
Hegel, G. (1899). The philosophy of history. (J. Sibree, Trans.). New York, NY: The
Colonial Press.
Rallis, S., & Rossman, Gretchen B. (2012). The research journey: Introduction to
inquiry. New York, NY: The Guilford Press.

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Inquiry, Social Change, Implications for Art Education

  • 1. Running head: Inquiry, Social Change, and Implications for Art Educational Research 1 Foundations of Educational Research & Doctoral Scholarship I [EDUS 702] Inquiry, Social Change, and Implications for Art Educational Research Written Response Three 3/27/2017 Kyle Guzik Virginia Commonwealth University
  • 2. Response Three 2 Theory of Social Change and Approach to Inquiry To develop my theory of social change I begin with the propositions that support my approach to inquiry. Rather than delineating a theory of social change and then an approach to inquiry it informs (or vice versa), I will attempt to examine these concepts simultaneously to emphasize my perspective on their intertwined nature. The Hegelian dialectic is a useful logical model and is also important in explanations of social events. In argumentation, first, one proposes a thesis, which is a claim. In sociology, a thesis is a given event that occurs and affects humanity. The antithesis is the response to the thesis; it is a reaction that contradicts the thesis. An antithesis may be considered the cultural response to an event. Synthesis is the integration of the thesis and antithesis. A generic example of a sociocultural dialectic process might include resolution by a population of tensions initiated by a natural disaster. A hypothetical sequence from dialectical materialism could include instigation of a cultural event by one population, leading to counteraction by another, with a final reckoning occurring between populations. The Hegelian dialectic implies phenomenological consequences. These consequences involve the nature of subjectivity, idiosyncratic experience unique to an individual: This Dialectic, which unsettles all particular judgements and opinions, transmuting the Evil into Good and Good into Evil, left at last nothing remaining but the mere action of subjectivity itself… – Thought. Thought contemplates everything under the form of Universality, and is consequently the impulsion towards and production of the Universal (Hegel, 1899, p. 438). Hegel reflected upon contradictions in Jesuit ideology. The Roman Catholic Church developed the Society of Jesus to resist the Protestant Reformation. Therefore, Jesuit argumentation developed with the goal of aggressively proving specific claims. Judgement and opinion became irrelevant because only one interpretation of any evidence could exist, that endorsed by the Roman Catholic Church. Contradictions appear because without interpretation, the distinction between good and evil becomes unclear. Elimination of opinion and judgement extinguished hermeneutics and left only phenomenology, subjective experience. For Hegel, cognition is subjectivity. Thought is the integration of sensory data with an individual’s mental constructs. This conceptual framework can be considered universalist in that it is a form of monism, an umbrella term for attributions of oneness. In my approach to inquiry, I use objectivist epistemology (Rallis & Rossman, 2012). However, I do not presume that objectivist epistemological claims should be accepted axiomatically. I am concerned with rational inquiry that yields insight into causal explanations of the natural world. However, problems remain: [I]t must be observed that the unity of Thought with its Object is already implicitly present [i.e. in the fundamental constitution of the Universe]. For Reason is the substantial basis of Consciousness as well as of the External and Natural. Thus, that which presents itself as the Object of Thought is no longer an absolutely distinct form of existence (Hegel, 1899, p. 439). Universalist explanations that employ reason to link consciousness with the natural world that exists external to the subjective observer are of the same category (monism) as universalist
  • 3. Response Three 3 theological explanations. This is the crux of critiques involving charges of scientism, that empiricism is a form of secular religion. This becomes apparent in Aguste Comte’s (1899) origination of the modern formulation of positivism. Comte describes positivism as an extension of the Deism promulgated by Founding Fathers of the United States such as Benjamin Franklin. Deism supposed, or posited, the existence of a supreme being. However, this being acted only as a prime mover and ceased interference with causality after creating the universe. Comte’s (1899) description of positivism employs a similar casuistry evident in the Jesuit tradition in which theoretical rules derived from past instances apply to future instances: [Positivisme] dans des vues d'abord scientifiques, y voit maintenant la source de la solution sociale d'après la fondation d'un véritable pouvoir spirituel, capable de concilier radicalement l'ordre et le progrès. La plénitude et la gravité de cette nouvelle adhésion résultent de son harmonie spontanée avec le fond de la situation Américaine où les vrais conservateurs se sentient près d’être écrasés par de redoutables niveleurs, contre lesquels ils ne voient d’autre ressource systématique que dans la religion démontrée qui caractérise le positivisme (p. 216). Positivism was a “social solution” implemented by “real conservatives” (the Founders) to resist the frightening potential of the American Revolution to cause socioeconomic equality, a possibility they viewed as an existential threat (Comte, 1899, p. 216). Comte (1899) claims that the Founders viewed positivism as a “systematic resource” because it was a “demonstrated religion” that could restore hierarchical control via “true spiritual power” (p. 216). Consider the dialectical nature of this process. The succession of the Thirteen Colonies from Great Britain generated a thesis of social instability. The political aristocracy who participated in the Continental Congress required a new form of social control consistent with American Enlightenment dogma. Comte describes this system (the antithesis developed by the colonial oligarchy to American revolutionary social instability) as positivism. The framing of the Constitution of the United States might be considered a synthesis of these sociocultural forces. Contradictions remain in my argument for objectivist epistemology. I have a naturalistic worldview free from supernatural and mystical elements. I find the Hegelian dialectic appealing in its explanatory power of societal change because of its congruence with materialism and physicalism. One may align Comte’s account of positivism within a dialectical framework. Yet, both the Hegelian dialectic and Comte’s positivism can be considered forms of monism. They are concerned with unified explanations. Religions might also be considered another form of monism in that they each provide one explanation for events and the nature of reality. However, one formulation common to religions is the existence of an immaterial soul. This construct distinguishes the monism evident in Hegel and Comte’s ideas with a creeping dualism in theology. Dualism is the view that there are two mutually irreducible, ontologically distinct forms of phenomena and/or substance. The proposition of an immaterial soul is a form of mind- body dualism. It is also conceivable that religions could involve pluralism, in which there are multiple ontologically distinct items such as heaven, hell, reincarnation, karma, spiritual or faith- based phenomena, and deities. In this conception, the soul is a form of consciousness that exists independently from the natural world. Inside this soul mental events can occur, which are distinct from physical events in objective reality. Unlike theology, dialecticism and positivism
  • 4. Response Three 4 do not require mental and physical dualism specifically, regardless of whether other forms of dualism can be identified in the latter two constructs. Psychophysical reductionism is another form of monism, which supports the empirical basis of my approach to inquiry and theory of social change. My operational definition of psychophysical reduction is that material, physical evidence supports psychological claims, and ultimately, this evidence is the only support for these claims. Critics of psychophysical reduction complain that it limits the choices researchers can make when developing special science theories. This is a mistake. As a prerequisite, this argument concedes that the special sciences ground claims in the psychological and social sciences. Reductionist methodology does not constrain or regulate theory choice in the special sciences. Explanations from special sciences such as chemistry, biology, and neuroscience ultimately reduce theoretically to fundamental physics. Biclle (1996) proposes that “as successful development occurs in both psychology and neuroscience, psychological theories will come to stand in the reduction relation… to counterpart neurobiological theories” (p. 62). These neurobiological theories have also had counterparts in basic physics. Thus, in this chain of causal reasoning psychology is linked to neurobiology, which is linked to physics. This view supposes that the role of philosophy is to assimilate and adapt knowledge from the natural sciences to the present volume of philosophical discourse. Philosophy can be considered an applied science, or technology. In addition, psychology and neurobiology are perceived as in development. Researchers in these fields continue to propose new questions and explanations, which evolve subject to empirical verification. As long as this development continues to occur there is no restriction on the theoretical choices available to researchers. While the motivation for the development of positivism may have been to reestablish social hierarchical control, contemporary theorists need not grate at the possibility that their social research is somehow less than, or even ontologically distinct from basic research. Instead anthropology, psychology, biology, physics, etc. can be viewed as heuristic approaches with different levels of resolution in reductionist methodology. Consider a continuum in sociology regarding the regulation of social change, between predictable progression and radical transformation (Rallis & Rossman, 2012, p. 33). A description of periods of stasis interrupted by profound alterations could be applied to the concept of cultural revolution in societal development, or to the concept of punctuated equilibria in evolutionary biology. Cultural events are subject to physical events. Examples include changes in population size, meteorological phenomena, DNA replication errors, and variation in background radiation due to cosmic ray events as well as geological distribution of radioactive elements. Cultural events are also subject to technological changes, including inventions, such as iPhones, arrowheads, forge welding, cuneiform tablets, or monotheism. Parallels can be drawn between different areas of research and identification of these interrelationships expand human knowledge. Trustworthy Research Rallis and Rossman (2012) describe the scientific method as a “systematic inquiry cycle” (p. 46). The scientific method requires the following fundamental steps:
  • 5. Response Three 5 • [First scientists are] curious and ask a question; • Construct a hypothesis; • Observe and collect data or test the hypothesis by doing an experiment; • Analyze the data and draw a conclusion; • Communicate results; and • Repeat or replicate the experiment (Rallis & Rossman, 2012, p. 46). Systematic inquiry helps researchers demonstrate the trustworthiness of their research studies. When developing hypotheses, researchers should relate their work to relevant theory. Extensive review of the background literature surrounding a given problem helps researchers to increase the specificity of their questions, identify what is already known and what research approaches have already been attempted, and provide support for the construct validity of research methodologies used in their research. Research that conforms to the systematic inquiry cycle is subject to peer review. In order to collaborate with scientific peers, researchers should propose hypotheses that are verifiable with empirical evidence. A research hypothesis should also be falsifiable in that evidence could conceivably be collected or arguments could be made that would lead researchers to reject the hypothesis. Literature review can help a researcher construct a falsifiable claim. Literature review can also help a researcher avoid the logical fallacy of the argument from ignorance, the incorrect belief that a claim is true if it has not been proven false, or that a claim is false if it has not been proven true. Attention to extant literature can help scientists establish initial confidence in their methods of inquiry by demonstrating to potential reviewers that the scientist has given consideration to the concerns of the learning community that has previously explored and is interested in the subjects and fields related to their research. Dissertation Research and Conceptions of Trustworthiness For my dissertation, I will conduct research in art education. My understanding of what that statement means continues to evolve. My plan has been to conduct recordings and from these render transcripts during observations of art teachers and students under various instructional settings. I would then subject those transcripts to some form of statistical analysis and make causal claims. One problem with this approach is that it is quantitative, lexical, and conceptual. These approaches investigate an incomplete construct of visual language. Lexical communication could be considered irrelevant to research in visual language, in that it is contradictory to investigate visual ideas with written language. A work of art might be the best response to another work of art. Redundant quantitative analysis of art instruction could be used to impose a new regulatory framework on art teachers or to destroy what many students enjoy most about art classes. In defense of my plans, one of my goals would be to better understand intentionality in the human mind. I do not buy into the statement attributed to Warhol that “art is anything you can get away with,” and I would not apply this notion to my dissertation research. However, I accept the premise that anything can be art; and therefore, also, everything is art. For this reason, I believe that art cannot be created; it can only be found in nature. Because of this, in order for my dissertation research to be trustworthy it must investigate questions authentic to the field of art education. To me, art education seems more concerned with finding art (and artists) rather than attempting to create it (and them). In addition, to me, art educational questions concern the natural world and objective reality. Reductionist methodology seems to me to be the most honest way to address these questions.
  • 6. Response Three 6 References: Biclle, J. (1996). New wave psychophysical reductionism and the methodological caveats. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 56(1), 57-78. Comte, A. (1903). Correspondance inédite dʹ Auguste Comte. Paris, FR: Au Siège de la Société Positiviste. Hegel, G. (1899). The philosophy of history. (J. Sibree, Trans.). New York, NY: The Colonial Press. Rallis, S., & Rossman, Gretchen B. (2012). The research journey: Introduction to inquiry. New York, NY: The Guilford Press.