I don’t know about the rest of you non-philosophers, but I
am intrigued by the tales I hear from some philosophers (and their family
members) about how weird they were as children.
[Note: I’m going to
preface the rest of this entry by saying that I have years of professional
experience working with children in the eight-to-sixteen-years-old range, and
none of the children I interacted with had exactly these sorts of dramatic
philosopher-reactions to situations (though there were lots of “whys,” but most
children go through a “why” phase)].
So today I thought it would be fun to share a few childhood stories
that I’ve heard from my philosopher about his childhood, and then encourage you
to either ask your philosopher about her/his childhood and/or share your own in
the comments.
Story 1: Newton’s
Third Law of Motion Must be Incorrect
My philosopher was in the fifth grade (around eleven-years-old)
when his class was learning about Newton’s laws of motion. When they reached
the third law (“for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction”), my
philosopher knew that this law was
completely wrong. He envisioned a situation in which a bar attached to a
machine could be moving toward another object (say, a very large boulder). At
the point of impact, this bar would be stopped by the machine such that the bar
did not at all bounce off the boulder, in the way that this law of motion
required the bar to.
My philosopher debated about this with his teacher for
several weeks in class—refusing to give in until the teacher videotaped a
situation where the philosopher pushed another student. She showed him how he
bounced back slightly, even though he was the one exerting the force. Despite
the video evidence, my philosopher spent more time trying to explain why the
so-called “evidence” proved nothing since it didn’t really challenge the
thought experiment as such.
This teacher was so angry at him by the end that she made
him write a long report about Newton, and then made him read it aloud to the
class (a sort of punishment for being annoying).
Could you guess that this philosopher became an analytic
philosopher? [The crazy, impossible thought experiment gives it away].
Story 2: Free-Will, God’s
Knowledge, and Impossibilities
When my philosopher was around seven-years-old when he began
to be bothered by questions of free will. He can remember sitting around for
hours, trying to reason through ideas like:
Let’s say I move my hand. Does God know that I was going to
move my hand? Did he know that I knew that he knew that I was going to move my
hand? When does the circle of this knowing end?
My parents say that I should love God more than them. How
can I measure how much I love my parents, in order to love God even more? And
how can I love God when I’ve never met him? I do know that I love my parents,
but I see them every day and they do all sorts of nice things for me (like give
me presents and make me lunch).
So, now that you’ve started thinking about
philosopher-children, do you see any of your current children on their way to
becoming philosophers? I certainly hope so; the world needs more philosophers.
~The Philosiologist
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(left sidebar). Forgive me for the shorter entry today, as I am off to paint J.S. Mill's portrait on a living room pillow and tend to my zucchini seedlings.
Last year I bought my eldest son a book on philosophy (he was eight at the time). He was walking home from school with his mum, and being berated for some act of naughtiness by her - he looked up and said 'you can't blame me for that mum, I'm qualitatively a different person now than when I did it.' This is what happens when you let children read about Hereclites. I'm pretty sure she told him to 'shut it'.
ReplyDeleteFor his birthday I'm going to buy him some R.M. Hare so he can learn the error of his ways.
Read Gareth Mathews's books _Philosophy and the Young Child_ and _Dialogues with Children_, and check out his website http://philosophyforkids.com/
ReplyDeleteA philosopher friend of mine confessed she took everything literally. I had something similar. I couldn't get jokes in High school, which made for a rather unpleasant experience. When I was around 5, I was lost in my thoughts (as I often was and still am) and my mom told me that I was "dans la Lune" ("in the moon" - the French expression for "in his thoughts"). I contemplated the idea for a few seconds, started laughing, and said: "it's impossible!"
ReplyDeleteOn the topic of introducing young children to philosophy:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=2415
My first philosophical question as a toddler: if this is my right hand, and this is my left, which way is south?
ReplyDeleteLove this post! Mind if I contribute?
ReplyDeleteAround the age of 6, I became very concerned with whether my bedroom persisted in my absence. To soothe my concerns that my room (and all my belongings) were not popping in and out of existence each time I left and re-entered the room, I devised an experiment. I would leave the room nonchalantly (so it didn't know I was up to something, I guess), and then either inch the door open slowly or jerk the door open suddenly, depending on my level of frustration. It bothered me to no end that I couldn't find the right way to catch my bedroom as it crossed the threshold of existence.
It still bothers me, to be honest.
My parents turned me into a philosopher:
ReplyDeletehttp://lizmckinnell.wordpress.com/2012/09/19/when-will-i-know-everything/
My nephew was more impressive. I was a philosophy undergraduate and he was about 4 years old when we had this conversation:
Him: I'm worried. God doesn't change, does he?
Me: Um.... why do you think that?
Him: Because he's the best he could be, forever, and if he changed he would get better or worse.
Me: (!!!!!) OK, why are you worried?
Him: Well.. how can he be happier when I've said my prayers?