Title: Good Morning
1Good Morning
- Please make yourself a drink and find your seat.
- With your table mates please have a conversation
on how your background has affected your
knowledge. - Secondly please discuss what you know about TOK
and what you believe about TOK.
2Welcome to Theory of Knowledge
- Stingrays
- Platos dialogues on Socrates and confusion.
STINGRAYS
3Socrates is accused of deliberately confusing
everyone by Meno
- Meno says
- you are exactly like the flat sting ray that
one meets in the sea. Whenever anyone comes into
contact with it, it numbs him If you behaved
like this as a foreigner in another country, you
would most likely be arrested as a wizard. - Socrates replies If the sting ray paralyzes
others only through being paralyzed itself, then
the comparison is just, but not otherwise. It is
not that, knowing the answer myself, I perplex
other people. The truth is rather that I infect
them also with the perplexity I feel myself.
4- The point is, if one of the most brilliant
thinkers in the history of the world not only
experienced confusion, but believed that it was a
positive emotion, then theres really no shame in
getting bewildered from time to time.
5- Terms we take for granted, like truth, belief,
opinion, and of course knowledge are often far
from straightforward, and will be considered in
some detail as we proceed. - Now think back to the conversation you had with
your table mates at the start of the class.
6What you know about TOK (the truth) What you believe about TOK
7The Big Three
- What is this class all about?
- Is it the same as philosophy?
- Is it based on humanities?
- Is it more to do with science?
- Is it more skills-based designed to help you
study? - Is it mandatory?
- How is it assessed?
81. What is this class all about?
- All of these things and more!
- It involves some philosophy, and draws on the
ideas of the most famous thinkers from throughout
history. - Certainly, it involves looking at aspects of the
humanities, as well as the different sciences. - And there are parts of it that will definitely
help you to improve the way you study other
academic subjects. - But theres a lot more to it than those things.
Its probably best understood by looking at its
aims, the fundamental one of which is simple to
help you think more clearly and deeply. - More on the aims in a few minutes.
9So how do we do it?
- By looking at both the subjects we study (the
areas of knowledge) and how we perceive them (the
ways of knowing), and then trying to work out the
connections between them and ourselves as
knowers. - I know that already that sounds complicated.
- It means in practice that we try to apply what we
are learning to the world of ideas, pondering
such questions as Can art be fundamentally good
or bad? - How complete is the picture of the world that
science provides us with? - How much do ethical decisions depend on society
and individual? - Does our view of History change over time?
- ... and so on.
102. Is it mandatory?
- Yes!
- the IBO (International Baccalaureate
Organization) considers the skills and topics
that youll be learning during the course very
important. - TOK, alongside the extended essay and CAS, is one
of the three things that sets the diploma apart
from other programs of its type, such as AP
classes, and, dare we say it, makes the diploma a
superior and more demanding course. - Also Universities love it!
113. How is it assessed?
- Youll be assessed in two ways in your senior
year of the course. - First youll write an essay which will be
externally marked. - You get to choose from a list of 6 titles, and
given time in class and at home (if necessary) to
complete it. - Then youll give an oral presentation in class
that will be marked by Ms. Burton. - Your overall grade will be worked out on a scale
of A E, and together with your extended essay,
it will contribute up to 3 points to your overall
mark out of 45. - One change that has recently been made is that
you have to pass TOK in order to pass your
Diploma. - Even if you have done extremely well in your
other subjects, you will not be awarded you
diploma if your grade in TOK is less than a C.
12- TOK is about issues, about debate, about forming
opinions, and about trying to improve the way we
structure our thoughts and ideas. - It is about being critical but not cynical,
interested but also objective, well-informed but
not opinionated. - What does this mean?
13- It is about encouraging the process that Maria
Mitchell talked about when she said - We have a hunger of the mind which asks for
knowledge of all around us, and the more we gain,
the more is our desire the more we see, the more
we are capable of seeing. - Please take the next 5 minutes to write down a
reflection on this passage in your Journal.
14Stretch and refill
15Aims of the course
- To help students to discover the richness of
knowledge, and to realize how empowering
knowledge can be. - To examine how knowledge is built up, examined,
and evaluated by individuals and societies. - To reflect on how we learn both inside and
outside school - and to make links between the
academic disciplines and our thoughts, feelings
and actions. - To reinforce the idea that there are many
different ways of thinking and perspectives, and
that assumptions that we have because of our
cultural and individual positions may obscure the
way we see the world. - To suggest some of the responsibilities that may
come with knowledge.
16- But how does TOK propose to do all these
high-minded things? That can be fathomed out from
the structure of the course, and its part in the
IB diploma program. - TOK doesnt have a curriculum quite as tight as
other subjects. The reason for that is simple
there is no checklist of things you have to know
for the end of course exam, because there is no
end of course exam. - Instead, you are expected to be able to construct
a wide-ranging essay and presentation that draw
on your own ideas and opinions, formed during
your time in the course - Having said that, you will focus on several
distinct things
17An introduction to knowledge
- We will begin by looking at what we mean by the
term knowledge, and the way people have tried
to divide it up. - Its probably worth pointing out that looking at
a theory of knowledge is by no means a new
idea almost all philosophy courses at university
level devote some time to its consideration,
though they use the slightly less manageable term
epistemology. - And almost all philosophers of worth (and a great
many thinkers in other fields) have devoted some
of their time to thinking about it. - In this first section, we will also think about
truth, about various ways of testing whether
something is true, and well come across a few
philosophers whose ideas you probably already
know.
18Ways of knowing (WOKs)
- We will move on to think about the ways we gather
knowledge, and process it. In TOK, we divide
these ways into four sense perception (sight,
hearing, etc.), emotion, language, and reason. - We will examine each one individually, and try to
work out how they are all interlinked. - In some ways they are linked in a positive way,
working complimentarily in others, their
relationship is more negative, and one way of
knowing hinders another. - Well also think about other possible ways of
knowing. Should there just be four? What else,
and why, could be considered a way we build up
knowledge of the world?
19Areas of knowledge (AOKs)
- Then well go on to the knowledge itself. This we
divide into six areas mathematics, natural
sciences (biology, chemistry, physics), human
sciences (sociology, anthropology, and most other
things with an ology in them), history, ethics,
and the arts. - Like the WOKs, well look at them on their own,
and then figure out how they overlap with each
other. - Well also investigate how the AOKs relate to the
WOKs, and whether any of them fit naturally
together. - To give and example of this, we might think about
how emotion is used by artists to convey their
messages. We might consider how the way we use
language affects our understanding of history. We
might pose the question Is reason the only AOK
used in mathematics?
20Knowledge issues
- Youll see the phrase knowledge issues a lot in
TOK. Your essay and presentation are based around
the idea of knowledge issues how well chosen
they are, how well analyzed they are, and how
well you link them together. So, what are
knowledge issues? - Knowledge issues are, simply, issues about
knowledge, usually framed as questions. - You have to be able to answer them first by
explaining what they are, then presenting an
argument (backed up by evidence), next, a
counterclaim (more evidence), and finally a
conclusion. - They cant be too easily answerable or closed,
but then again, they cant be too vague and
all-encompassing. - Ideally, they should be closely related to one or
more of the AOKs or WOKs. - At this stage, theyre not worth worrying about
too much you will come to understand what is,
and what is not, a knowledge issue as you follow
the course.
21The TOK Diagram
- The Arts
- Emotion
- Ethics
- History
- Human Sciences
- Knower(s)
- Language
- Mathematics
- Natural Sciences
- Reason
Learn it, Live it, Love it!
22Are you ready my little Stingrays to go out and
shock yourselves and the world?
Homework bring in a picture or a copy of it that
you can cut up and use for tomorrow. Wallet size
up to 5 x 7