Philosophy of Transdisciplinarity: Approaches to the Definition

  • Larisa Kiyashchenko Doctor of philosophical Sciences, leading researcher Institute of philosophy Russian Academy of Sciences
Keywords: Transdisciplinarity philosophy, practical experience, casus, reflection, transposition concept

Abstract

The article shows that the experience of practical philosophizing is  the  cornerstone of  the  possibility  to  define  the  philosophy of transdisciplinarity. The conditions for this experience are an active and motivated participation in the solution of actual existential problems connected with the existence of objects proportional to the person. Along with traditional forms of disciplinary scientific knowledge (natural and social sciences), a wide range of daily practical knowledge, religious and other experiences are involved in the production of knowledge required for dealing with these problems. The article notes that, owing to boundary nature of  transdisciplinary  experience, its conditions both precede the experience as an accumulated knowledge, and at the same time are newly redefined and become others (are in a sense generated) depending on concrete circumstances of the experience. The result of such interaction is a paradoxical development of practical activities whose “aposteriority-aprioristic” forms combine a variety of universal definition of what is disciplinary and generally valid by agreement of daily, practical knowledge. Owing to the above, the philosophy of transdisciplinarity has, among other features, an incomplete, procedural nature of “open work” (U. Eko), and the style of philosophizing is developed in three main transpositions (the observer, the participant, the witness).

Published
2017-01-01
How to Cite
Kiyashchenko, L. (2017). Philosophy of Transdisciplinarity: Approaches to the Definition. Transdisciplinary Journal of Engineering & Science, 8. https://doi.org/10.22545/2017/00084
Section
Articles