“…Gesture and gesture/speech studies in particular provide empirical support for the embodied nature of mathematical knowing generally and categorization in particular (Lakoff & Núñez 2000). Based on careful analyses of graphing competencies among scientists, our own research shows that the meaning of concepts exists in the metonymic relationship that words, graphs, and experiences-i.e., the parts of a conception-have with respect to the conception as a whole (Roth 2004).…”
Mathematical concepts and conceptions have been theorized as abstractions from-and therefore transcending-bodily and embodied experience. In this contribution, we re-theorize mathematical conceptions by building on recent philosophical work in dialectical phenomenology. Accordingly, a conception exists only in, through, and as of the experiences that the individual realizes it. To exemplify our reconceptualization of mathematical conceptions, we draw on an episode from a study in a second-grade classroom where the students learned about three-dimensional geometrical objects.
“…Gesture and gesture/speech studies in particular provide empirical support for the embodied nature of mathematical knowing generally and categorization in particular (Lakoff & Núñez 2000). Based on careful analyses of graphing competencies among scientists, our own research shows that the meaning of concepts exists in the metonymic relationship that words, graphs, and experiences-i.e., the parts of a conception-have with respect to the conception as a whole (Roth 2004).…”
Mathematical concepts and conceptions have been theorized as abstractions from-and therefore transcending-bodily and embodied experience. In this contribution, we re-theorize mathematical conceptions by building on recent philosophical work in dialectical phenomenology. Accordingly, a conception exists only in, through, and as of the experiences that the individual realizes it. To exemplify our reconceptualization of mathematical conceptions, we draw on an episode from a study in a second-grade classroom where the students learned about three-dimensional geometrical objects.
“…Familiarity with the depicted content has previously been pointed out to be of great importance in graph learning situations (e.g., Roth, 2004;Winn, 1993) and was intentionally built into the design of the study. It may be assumed that this familiarity contributed to the students' successful learning of many fundamental features of graphing.…”
Section: Some Further Reflections On Educational Implicationsmentioning
“…"Making meaning" is an incorrect expression in the sense that meaning already exists (e.g., Roth, 2004): in talking about perceptually available climatic differences as one moves from lower to higher elevationsclearly noticeable when one scales one of the mountains in the area where Eddie lives -Eddie articulates traces his prior experience has left in him. This description is already part of a familiar, meaningful world, which Eddie knows through his practical experience.…”
Section: Producing Itself In Articulation For the Othermentioning
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