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The cooperative principle and collaborative inquiry
Author(s) -
Philip Cam
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of philosophy in schools
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2204-2482
DOI - 10.21913/jps.v5i2.1523
Subject(s) - grice , cooperative principle , focus (optics) , extension (predicate logic) , epistemology , information exchange , sociology , order (exchange) , discourse analysis , pedagogy , psychology , pragmatics , linguistics , computer science , philosophy , physics , finance , economics , optics , programming language , telecommunications
The norms associated with HP Grice’s cooperative principle focus on exchange of information and require considerable extension in order to capture the presiding features of discourse that attempts to inquire into a problem or an issue. These features are revealed by looking at the case of collaborative philosophical inquiry. Although it is a special case, the findings have widespread implications for education. When teachers venture beyond the kind of informative discourse that has traditionally monopolised verbal exchange in the classroom and engage in collaborative inquiry-based teaching, they need to attend to the norms that govern such discourse.

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