Krishnamurti & Dewey in the Metaverse: Education & Experience in an Age of Virtuality

by | Thursday, March 21, 2024

What does it mean to have an educative experience?

As Dewey famously wrote:  

Questions such as these come to the forefront as our experiences become increasingly virtual and mediated by technologies like VR/AR, the metaverse and the more recently announced Apple Vision Pro. They push us to ask some fundamental questions about the nature of educational experiences and what learning truly means.

I was recently invited by my former professor Kirti Trivedi to write an article for a new journal he was starting, titled nEDU: A Journal of Innovations in Education. I decided to take this opportunity to dig deeper into what constitutes an educative experience in these technologically mediated times.

I invited Marina Basu, a doctoral student at MLFTC, to join me. Marina brought a deep humanism to this task and together we explored these issues through the lenses of two education philosophers: Jiddu Krishnamurti and John Dewey. Both Krishnamurti and Dewey emphasized the critical importance of direct experiences and inquiry over mere book learning for holistic individual development. That said, they also had some differences, particularly around the goals of education.

While Dewey approached the value of educative experiences from a pragmatic, democratic perspective and Krishnamurti viewed it more spiritually as a means for self-realization. In other words, Dewey saw educational experiences as fostering democratic citizenship through learners’ interactions with their environment, while Krishnamurti believed educative experiences should awaken intelligence and free the individual from societal conditioning through self-inquiry and right relationships.

We contrasted two examples to make their ideas more concrete – one from an actual classroom focused on hands-on, inquiry-based learning, and another hypothetical virtual experience allowing atomic-scale exploration impossible in the real world. The virtual example shows the amazing potential, but also raises questions about pre-programmed experiences disconnected from the learner’s reality.

Drawing on Dewey and Krishnamurti, we wondered about some questions educators should ponder as virtual experiences grow: How do we preserve self-inquiry and democratic principles? What about spontaneity when experiences are designed? Who shapes the worldviews “framed” into these virtual universes?

There is a lot in the article, too much to summarize here. The complete citation and link to the article is given below. But before that, just because we started with a quote from Dewey, let us end with one from Krishnamurti.

Mishra, P., & Basu, M. (2014). Jiddu Krishnamurti and John Dewey in the Metaverse: Education and Experience in an age of Virtuality. nEDU: A Journal of Innovations in Education, 1 (1) pp. 65-74.

Note: While writing this paper, back in April, I thought it may be fun to play a little experiment to see how generative AI would handle a possible conversation between JD and JK – and I wrote a blog post about my experiment: Krishnamurti & Dewey in the metaverse.

Topics related to this post: Worth Reading

A few randomly selected blog posts…

Creating Palindrograms, aka palindromic ambigrams

Ambigram.com is a website about ambigrams and the people who make them. Lots of cool stuff for enthusiasts and novices alike. They often conduct competitions and other fun challenges for readers. One recent one was related to palindromes. In brief, they challenged...

Does the Internet mean that knowledge is obsolete?

I was recently interviewed by Wired magazine for a story about Sugata Mitra's (of Hole in the Wall fame) experiments with minimally invasive learning, or more recently what are called SOLE (Self Organized Learning Environment) classrooms / schools. I have been...

Ed Week goes TPACK

There is an article in yesterday's Education Week (a part of their Technology Counts series) titled "Learning to Teach with Technology." I was interviewed by the author (Vaishali Honawar) a few months ago and had completely forgotten about it, till someone emailed me...

The brilliantly twisted mind of PES

I discovered PES a couple of years ago when searching for examples of stop motion animation on the web. One glimpse of his work and I was smitten. Combine a prefect sense of timing and shot composition with a whimsical and surrealistic point of view and you get some...

A different vision of the web

T. H. Nelson coined the word "hypertext" and more than anyone else, and much earlier than anyone else, truly understood how computing technology would change the text and print. One of my most treasured possession is a copy of his double-book ("Computer Lib: You Can...

New Gandhi ambigram

The quest for a better design continues... Much better, I think, than my previous attempt

New course: Creativity in teaching & learning

Announcing a new online course for the fall semester 2008:Creativity in teaching and learning Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently… You can praise them, disagree...

Creativity and the urban STEM teacher

Creativity and the urban STEM teacher

I have written previously about the MSUrbanSTEM project and what it has meant to me. Over the past couple of years we have also published about this line of work (most prominently in a special issue of The Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching)....

Education & the Rise of AI Influencers

Education & the Rise of AI Influencers

I have been thinking hard about the nature of generative AI, what sets it apart from other technologies that have come in the past. It seems to me there are two key factors. The first is its ability to engage in dialogue, in natural language and the second are its...

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *