Postdigital Dialogue Petar Jandrić
Postdigital Dialogue Petar Jandrić (Zagreb University of Applied Sciences, Croatia), Thomas Ryberg (Aalborg University, Denmark), Jeremy Knox (Edinburgh University, UK), Nataša Lacković (Lancaster University, UK), Sarah Hayes (Aston University, UK), Juha Suoranta (Tampere University, Finland), Mark Smith (Loughborough University, UK), Anne Steketee (Chapman University, US), Michael Peters (Beijing Normal University, China), Peter McLaren (Chapman University, US), Derek R. Ford (DePauw University, US); Gordon Asher (The University of the West of Scotland, UK), Callum McGregor (Edinburgh University, UK), Georgina Stewart (Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand), Ben Williamson (University of Stirling, UK); Andrew Gibbons (Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand) Introduction (Petar) Dialogue is an exchange of information between people, a linguistic format which supports such exchange, a form of art, a type of inquiry, an approach to pedagogy, a precondition for social change, and much more. In Western philosophical tradition, argues Michael Peters, dialogue comes down to us “through the Platonic dialogues, a kind of dramatization of the dialectics where Socrates in dialogue with another drives the opponent to an elenchus or contradiction. At this point, the game of arguing for the sake of conflict, or eristics, is over.“ (in Jandrić 2017: 30) In the history of Western thought, we can talk of many kinds of dialogue based around the innovations of Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Buber (the existential encounter); Heidegger and Gadamer (the hermeneutical model of participants as co-seekers of truth aiming at consensus); the critical dialogue of Habermas (‘the ideal speech situation’ without any form of coercion driven by argumentation alone); Freire’s dialogue as cultural action; Rorty’s conversation based on Gadamer and Oakeshott (‘the conversation of mankind’), Wittgenstein’s and Derrida’s genres of dialogue as forms of speaking to oneself as an interior dialogue; and so on.
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