Abstract

In a globalized world where the traditional, the modern, and the postmodern increasingly meet, there is a growing need for understanding, particularly of views different from our own. In this paper, I want to explore the concept of epistemological multilingualism and its value to scholarship, advancing the notion that epistemological multilingualism—the ability to respect and understand multiple epistemic standpoints—emerges out of a postmodern, integral perspective which sees the reality of several epistemological frameworks, as well as the ability to understand, learn from, and even to contribute to the development of those frameworks. I examine the dialogical capacities that contribute to epistemological multilingualism, and conclude that epistemological multilingualism can play a vital role in a world of education where differing worldviews manifest within the same classroom and the lives of the learners with whom we work.

Highlights

  • In the course of this paper, I will advance the notion that epistemological multilingualism—the ability to respect and understand multiple epistemic standpoints—emerges out of a dialogically postmodern, integral perspective which sees the reality of, and the need for, several epistemological frameworks, as well as the ability to understand, to learn from, and even to contribute to the development of those frameworks

  • As I will argue, epistemological multilingualism is fundamentally a dialogical epistemology, we can see its emergence out of stances such as those developed in relational and feminist epistemologies (see, for example, Barbara Thayer-Bacon (2003), who advocates for pluralist and fallible epistemologies)

  • I conclude that epistemological multilingualism can play a vital role in a world of education where traditional, modern, and postmodern worlds exist within the same classroom and are manifest in the lives of the learners with whom we work

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Summary

Charles Scott

Publisher(s) Canadian Philosophy of Education Society ISSN 0838-4517 (print) 1916-0348 (digital) Explore this journal.

Article abstract
Introduction
Articulating the Capacities of an Epistemological Multilingualism
The Narrow Ridge of Paradox and Nondualism
Educational Implications

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