歧义研究:古希腊文化、教育与戏剧中的教育学与创造

Ioli Andreadi
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摘要

Paidagogos和demiurgos是古希腊语言中的两个术语,早在公元前一千年就已经出现,在当代希腊语中仍在使用[1]。本文的目的是研究它们在不同的语境下的意义变化——知识的、艺术的和社会的——以及它们出现的领域,以及它们之间明显或潜在的关系。在古希腊语言中,paidagogos和demiurgos都不是一维的。通过对让·皮埃尔·弗南和佩吉·杜波依斯的分析,通过基于梅洛·庞蒂[2]的当代现象学视角的检验,歧义的符号学工具将帮助我们解释其意义的变化,以及这种变化可能发生的原因。在诗歌、历史、政治、教育和其他古代文献中,“paidagogos”和“demiurgos”这两个词可以指具有非常不同的功能和社会地位的人。在希腊戏剧,尤其是悲剧,如索福克勒斯的《伊莱克特拉》和欧里庇得斯的《伊翁》和《赫拉克勒德》中,半人半神,更清楚的是,paidagogos的模棱两可和地位的颠倒,以一种更加清晰的方式出现。考虑到希腊古代提出的一些主要教育问题在今天仍然具有相关性,此类研究的发现将有助于我们深入了解有关古希腊教育的哲学和现象学论述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Study on Ambiguity: Pedagogy and Creation in Ancient Greek Culture, Education and Drama
Paidagogos and demiurgos are two terms of the ancient Greek language already present during the first millennium B.C. and still in use in contemporary Greek [1]. The purpose of this paper is to examine the changes in their meaning according to context in which they are used – intellectual, artistic and social – and to the areas in which they appear, as well as the obvious or latent relation between them. Both the terms paidagogos and demiurgos are not one-dimensional in ancient Greek language. The semiotic tool of ambiguity, via the analysis of Jean Pierre Vernant and Page du Bois, tested through a contemporary phenomenological lens based on Merleau Ponty [2], will help us interpret the changes in their meaning, as well as the reasons why such changes may occur. In poetic, historical, political, pedagogical and other ancient texts, the terms paidagogos and demiurgos can refer to persons with very different functions and social status. The ambiguity and the reversal of the status of the demiurgos and, more clearly, of the paidagogos, appear in a far clearer way when they refer to persons (prosopa) of Greek drama, especially tragedies, like Sophocles’ Electra and Euripides’ Ion and The Heracleidae. The findings of such research will help us penetrate the philosophical and phenomenological discourse concerning education in ancient Greece, taking into account that some of the main educational questions raised in Greek antiquity still remain relevant today.
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