There are two main topics I want to discuss in relation to 'understanding', the first is a much more abstract discussion. Effectively it' a mk II of Harlequin's conceptualisation thread(which can be found here). Basically, are we able to truly understand anything at all, when we don't know everything? Considering we have no way of viewing or examining the universe in a divorced manner(i.e. as in we cannot view it as if we were not part of it), then is understanding something in its entirety possible?
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Now for the second part of this discussion. We have to assume that understanding is possible, at least in the colloquial sense. As well as some other generalisations and assumptions. I got to thinking about the difference in how I approach exam questions in maths, versus how I approach questions in English. For maths I memorise a sequence of equations, formulae, and computations. I then apply these to relatively standard question formats in order to work out an answer.
In English however, when asked a question on say 'Discuss the themes of love and regret in Derek Walcott's poetry', I use an entirely different approach. I think about what the question means to me, I cross-reference this with what I felt when I read the poems, and what I thought the poet meant. Then I begin to formulate an answer that is unique to me, and what I understood from the poet's work.
Now this made me wonder, what is the difference between understanding something and simply being able to memorise a sequence of facts or operations? Is there even a difference, is understanding simply such a high degree of memorisation it comes across as independent thought and understanding? Or is understanding simply something unique to each person's own perception?
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Now for the second part of this discussion. We have to assume that understanding is possible, at least in the colloquial sense. As well as some other generalisations and assumptions. I got to thinking about the difference in how I approach exam questions in maths, versus how I approach questions in English. For maths I memorise a sequence of equations, formulae, and computations. I then apply these to relatively standard question formats in order to work out an answer.
In English however, when asked a question on say 'Discuss the themes of love and regret in Derek Walcott's poetry', I use an entirely different approach. I think about what the question means to me, I cross-reference this with what I felt when I read the poems, and what I thought the poet meant. Then I begin to formulate an answer that is unique to me, and what I understood from the poet's work.
Now this made me wonder, what is the difference between understanding something and simply being able to memorise a sequence of facts or operations? Is there even a difference, is understanding simply such a high degree of memorisation it comes across as independent thought and understanding? Or is understanding simply something unique to each person's own perception?