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From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society UPV/EHU University of the Basque Country

From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

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Page 1: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

From Participatory Sense-Making

to LanguageThere and Back Again

Elena Clare CuffariEzequiel Di PaoloHanne De Jaegher

IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

UPV/EHUUniversity of the Basque

Country

Page 2: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Overview• How and what the enactive emphasis on

adaptivity, agency, meaning, experience, and interaction contributes to new sciences of languaging:

• A philosophical framework: languaging as a manner of living, i.e. adaptive social sense-making

• Two models improving upon the Maturanian view of languaging

• Linguistic bodies, boundaries, and meaning• Consequences for ethics and for

understanding experience

Page 3: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

• “We operate in language as our manner of being as we live in the present, in the flow of our interactions, in our domains of structural coupling” (2002, 27)

• “…notions of communication and symbolization are second to actually existing in language” (ibid)

• “…as the circular processes of the brain become coupled to the linear flow of ‘languaging’, that brain becomes a ‘languaging’ brain” (1995)

• Coordinations of coordinations

Maturana (the good stuff)

Page 4: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

“Language as a biological phenomenon…• Takes place in the relational domain as a manner of

living• and not in the brain as a phenomenon of the

operational and structural dynamics of the nervous system” (1995)

• Non-intersecting domains: metabolic-physiological & relational

Maturana (the not so good stuff)

Page 5: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

• Enaction starts with autonomousautonomous cognizingcognizing (sense-making) agentagent, “the normative engagement of a system with its world” (Di Paolo 2009)

• Cognition is sense-making in interaction sense-making in interaction (Di Paolo 2009)

• Agency seen in the asymmetrical modulation of the coupling between the autonomous entity and its environment.

• This is a post-Maturanian view:– Adaptivity– Agency– Experience– Meaning– Time : homeostasis and sense-making are both dynamic

temporal phenomena

Enaction

Page 6: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Participatory sense-making (De Jaegher and Di Paolo 2007)

• The sense-making of two or more agents is mutually modulated as they engage in an interactive encounter.

• The dynamics of social interaction form an autonomous self-sustaining identity (for a time) in the common space of coordinated and uncoordinated relational moves.

• There is a double influencedouble influence between interaction autonomy and individual autonomies of agents.

• Agents come to participate in each other’s sense-making; this also generates a deep basic tension.

Page 7: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Adaptivity and PSM in conversation

• What is at stake for biological-existential selves?

• What does it mean for a conversation to threaten one’s homeostasis?

• What does it mean to improve the conditions of one's self-production when the self is socio-linguistically mediated?

• What kind of account of language and embodiment do we need to answer such questions?

Page 8: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Approaching language: two models

• What is the What is the logical structurelogical structure of of languaging as a manner of living? languaging as a manner of living? – Similar to Wittgenstein’s slabs– But with special resources from the theory of

PSM– Dialectical structure of negotiating tensions

• What is the What is the observable and lived observable and lived experienceexperience of languaging as a manner of of languaging as a manner of living?living?– Circular relations of coping, incorporating, and

creating: Wheel of languaging– Applies and supports the definition of

languaging from the first model

Page 9: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Enactive languaging Languaging is a special

style of social agency

a double regulation of self and interaction that integrates the tensions inherent in PSM - dialogical organization and the creative, exploratory use of codified, in-common coordinating moves

Sense-making at the level of emergent horizons of normativity and significance

Page 10: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Wheel of languaging

Page 11: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Linguistic bodies• Individual beings that incorporate

sensitivities and powers pertaining to living in enlanguaged environments

• Not discursive bodies, not ephemeral, but perhaps excessive (potentialities, tuning to the virtual)

• Language is not a faculty or an instinct.• All bodies are not the same.• Pre-given sameness does not secure

meaning.

Page 12: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Linguistic borders

• Expanding circle within PSM• Questions for further research will include:– Are we ever outside of languaging?– Border collies, great apes, babies (“no pre-

linguistic infant” – Raçzaszek-Leonardi et al 2013)– How can we isolate and examine the contribution

of linguistic behavior in dynamic and distributed social interaction, and the sense made there?

• Experiential consequences of coordinations raises another question of boundaries: between self and other

Page 13: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Ethics of co-coordination

• Languaging involves coordinating others and being coordinated by them.

• We do not just do languaging with others, we do it to them, and have it done to us.

• And we do it to ourselves – diets, plans, judgments.

• Call for mindfulness and cultivated practices of listening to and speaking out of experience to improve our shared living in languaging.

Page 14: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Summary• What can enaction bring to language?–Meaning– Agency– Sensitive and powerful bodies, unique yet

intelligible– Normative and referential horizons of co-enacted

lifeworld– Ethical consequences in co-coordinating experience

• These core features of the enactive approach to cognition and social cognition offer a natural framework for investigating languaging as a manner of living.

Page 15: From Participatory Sense-Making to Language There and Back Again Elena Clare Cuffari Ezequiel Di Paolo Hanne De Jaegher IAS-Center for Life, Mind and Society

Thank You!

Thanks to Thomas Wiben Jensen, Yanna Popova, Jon Stewart and Tom Froese for very helpful comments on earlier drafts of this paper!!