BUILDING A PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY
Building a personal philosophy can be adventurous and extremely exciting. It can also be very rewarding despite the fact that it will be time-consuming and will require some painstaking effort now and in the future. Much care has been taken in the preceding pages to avoid bias and prejudice in presenting the various aspects of the major philosophical tendencies to you. At this point some might feel that the author should use, or at least is entitled to use, a few pages to tell you what he really believes. It is possible that you may feel you know already.
It would be relatively simple for me to build a strong case for a particular approach at this time. You might even forgive me for doing it. I well remember a retired philosophy of education professor who was engaged to teach a course as a "distinguished visiting professor" at Michigan. He knew that he wouldn't be around too much longer, and he just knew his particular philosophic stance was right. So he used his own text explaining his own approach and required no other contradictory readings whatsoever. I don't believe he was being fair to his students--unless he made crystal-clear exactly what he was doing. If he were to do that, the ethical thing for him to do was to permit his students to register for a different course if they decided to make such a move. Whatever, the really important issue right now, however, is for you to continue the development of your philosophy based upon your own experience and reflection.
May I suggest, also, that you consider Theodore Greene's warning given more than four decades ago:
No philosopher worthy of the name is a pure exemplification of any school or type, the wholly appropriate recipient of any handy philosophical label. He may prefer, and merit, some one label in reference to any other presently available, but if he actually functions as a philosopher he is devoting his life to the development and articulation of his own more or less distinctive beliefs, even if these fall primarily, or even wholly, within the confines of a historical school or tradition (1955, p. 91).
Five Possible Stages of Development
Ostrich Stage. You may find that you have been in the ostrich stage up to now. You may have buried your head in the sand (as this bird is reported to do periodically) and refused to allow yourself to become aware of the conflicting philosophies that exist in the world, in your culture, or within your specialized field of physical education and sport.
Cafeteria Stage. Or perhaps you may have climbed the ladder (in this instance a five-rung stepladder) a bit further and are at the cafeteria stage. This involves selecting some of this and some of that which looks appetizing for your philosophical fare. This eclectic approach has a great deal of appeal initially, but there appears to be strong evidence that it is generally regarded as philosophically indefensible. It may, of course, merely be one stage in an individual's development, but it is to be hoped that the devoted professional will soon make his or her way higher.
In assessing eclecticism, Wegener saw it as "a mosaic of diverse conceptions rather than a genuine integration of thought." He called it a "mixture" which he hoped would become a compound (1957, p. 31). As I see it, there is every reason to believe that a person will be attracted by certain elements of the various approaches. The fear I have is that a person may lift something out of context and insert it somewhere else where it simply does not belong. Thus I see this second stage simply as a resting place along the way up the ladder. If a person does not proceed higher into more rarefied air, I think he or she risks not achieving one's professional potential in the final analysis. (This goes back to my longstanding argument that a fine professional person should become a "missionary" for the promotion of the profession.)
Fence-Sitter Stage. The third rung of the ladder is a popular place. This rung has to be a strong one to hold all the people who have gotten this far and no further. I have designated this as the fence-sitter stage or level. Here we find people who have matured a bit more and have found, perhaps unconsciously to a degree, that they are inclining in one philosophic direction or another (e.g, to the left rather than the right; perhaps toward an existential-phenomenological orientation as opposed to a group-oriented position). But beyond that they are unwilling to go. Why? Maybe they're too lazy intellectually, if such a distinction may be made. Perhaps they're vaguely afraid of the consequences of a determined stand. We are told that all too many people are still inclined to be "organization" men or women who don't wish to rock the boat for fear of the possible consequences. Then again, there are often other reasons not disclosed. The late Princeton philosopher, Kaufmann (1973, Chap. 1), coined the term decidophobia for a person's fear of autonomy and/or decision-making.
Stage of Early Maturity. In time I fervently hope that you will at least rise to the fourth rung on this proposed philosophical ladder. This I call the stage of early maturity. At this point the individual professional has wrestled with herself or himself and the immediate social environment. This person has achieved a quality of unity or harmony that is characteristic of a philosophical position or stance that is reasonably logical or consistent in its various departments. She, if this is the case, is able to justify her convictions (which may earlier have been only tentative persuasions) intellectually to the extent that scientific knowledge, and perhaps faith, can assist her. As a result she has developed strong attitudes that are reflected in the moral ardor of her personal and professional life. It is probably not necessary to say that there is plenty of room on this rung of the ladder. Beware of the strong possibility of intolerance and fanaticism at this point!
Stage of Philosophical Maturity. As you mature still further, I hope that you will gradually achieve wisdom as well as mere knowledge. If you do, you may arrive at the stage of philosophical maturity. This level of personal and professional development can come from a broad and sound experience, diligent study, and ordered reflection. It is at this point that we as individuals realize the supreme importance and need for a certain amount of agreement or consensus on a nation-wide, indeed on a worldwide, basis.
Our world has reached a stage where the need for "peaceful strife" is infinitely greater than the types of struggles that have taken place in the past, and which are continuing in the present with seemingly little hope of resolution. At this level on the ladder, we most certainly realize the unique aspects of our own considered position and the importance of a continuing search for truth, however it may be best defined. And yet we should be tolerant of others and their beliefs, realizing that a most sincere effort should be made to increase the boundaries of any level of consensus that has been achieved. After all, it is quite possible, and seemingly quite probable, that only one position is truly right in the final analysis.
Conclusion
No matter which stage of philosophical development you may be at presently, you may find it necessary to retrace the various steps that have been recommended to assist you to build a personal philosophy that is logical, consistent, and systematic. Obviously, there is no hard and fast progression to which you must adhere. The steps that have been suggested should at least serve as a point of departure. It is with this in mind that I have included here an appendix that should help you understand a bit better where you stand right now.
Keep in mind that the philosophic quest is a never-ending one! You won't suddenly, at some later stage of your development, find all the answers to the problems and issues that confront you right now. But you will be leading a greatly enriched life that may truly be an "adventure of ideas," as Whitehead has so aptly expressed it.
Each of you should earn the right to be an influential person in your chosen field or research specialty relating to the profession--at least within your own sphere of operation, and hopefully much further. The field of developmental physical activity in sport, exercise, and related expressive activities has a truly unique contribution to make in the lives of all people everywhere whatever their age or condition may be. Whatever your philosophical position may be, understand it as fully as possible. If you do, it may enable you to live up to the highest standards of your profession. Ours can become a proud profession, if each of us strives to help people realize all the values that life has to offer.
This material was taken from Chapter 14 of Socio-Cultural Foundations of Physical Education and Education by Earle F. Zeigler. It was published by Meyer and Meyer, Aachen, Germany in 2003. For more information go to www.earlezeigler.com, and then click on Meyer & Meyer on the bottom of the home page.
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