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Encyclopedia > Autodidact

Autodidacticism (also autodidactism) is self-education or self-directed learning. An autodidact is a mostly self-taught person (also known as an automath), or someone who has an enthusiasm for self-education, and usually has a high degree of self-motivation. Going back through history, occasional individuals have sought to excel in subjects from outside the mainstream of conventional education. Jean Paul Sartre's Nausea depicts an autodidact who is a self-deluding dilettante. However, other autodidacts have excelled at their disciplines and brought innovative perspectives.


A successful autodidact may become an autodidact at nearly any point in his or her life. In modern times, most people have learned to read, write, and perform basic math processes from one or more teachers, often in the public-school system. And it should be said, self-teaching and self-directed learning are not necessarily lonely processes. Some autodidacts have taken selective post-secondary training in college, university, trade school, correspondence institutions, or night school, though in many people's case this sort of training has been minimal or sporadic for them. Some spend a great deal of time in libraries and/or on educative Web sites. Many have experienced in-the-job training through their employment situations. Many (according to their plan for learning) avail themselves of instruction from family members, friends, or other associates.


Inquiry into autodidacticism has implications in learning theory and educational theory, educational research, educational philosophy and educational psychology.

Contents

1 Books
2 See also
3 External links

Famous autodidacts

Mythologist Joseph Campbell is one of the most famous autodidacts, and is seen by some as a poster-boy for the methodology. Following completing his masters degree, Campbell decided not to go forward with his plans to earn a doctorate, and he went into the woods in upstate New York, reading deeply for five years. According to Campbell, this is, in a sense, where his real education took place, and the time when he began to develop his unique view on the nature of life.


According to poet and author Robert Bly, a friend of Campbell, Campbell developed a systematic program of reading nine hours a day. It is speculated by some that Campbell felt the work he did during this time was far more rigorous than any doctoral program could have been, and more fruitful in developing his unique perspectives.

Quotes related to autodidacticism

  • "Institutions are not pretty. Show me a pretty government. Healing is wonderful, but the American Medical Association? Learning is wonderful, but universities? The same is true for religion... religion is institutionalized spirituality." - Huston Smith
  • "If you do follow your bliss you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. When you can see that, you begin to meet people who are in your field of bliss, and they open doors to you. I say, follow your bliss and don't be afraid, and doors will open where you didn't know they were going to be." - Joseph Campbell
  • Actress Jada Pinkett Smith said of the Matrix directors: "The Wachowski Brothers are very unique. They are probably_ _ Larry and Andy are probably two of the smartest people I know. Larry reads everything. He reads everything. I mean, everything, you know what I mean. One thing I learned through Larry, through Andy also, is that life is about research. Larry, he's constantly researching. And he's constantly reading and that's one thing that I've taken away from this project, that life is about research."
  • "The new age of education is programmed for discovery rather than instruction. Art as radar environment, radar feedback, early warning system: the antennae of the race." _ Marshall McLuhan
  • "My education was of the most ordinary description, consisting of little more than the rudiments of reading, writing, and arithmetic at a common day school. My hours out of school were passed at home and in the streets." - Michael Faraday, who had little mathematics and no formal schooling beyond the primary grades, is celebrated as an experimenter who discovered the induction of electricity. He was one of the great founders of modern physics. It is generally acknowledged that Faraday's ignorance of mathematics contributed to his inspiration, that it compelled him to develop a simple, nonmathematical concept when he looked for an explanation of his electrical and magnetic phenomena. Faraday is considered by some to have posessed two qualities that more than made up for his lack of traditional education: fantastic intuition, and independence and originality of mind.
  • "The only thing that interferes with my learning is my education." - Albert Einstein
  • "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." _ Albert Einstein

Books

  • The Passion To Learn: An Inquiry into Autodidactism by Joan Solomon ISBN 0415304180
  • SELF-UNIVERSITY: The Price of Tuition is the Desire to Learn. Your Degree is a Better life. by Charles D. Hayes ISBN 0962197904

See also

  • Homeschooling

External links

www.autodidactic.com


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Social Affairs Unit - Web Review: The Autodidact: Someone who thinks for themselves? Or someone who can be rather ... (1677 words)
An autodidact is a person who has largely educated himself or herself and whose views of the world are largely self-inspired.
In our time, autodidacts have been less important and less visible than previously, a result of the movement of what is regarded as true knowledge and belief to the exclusive, or almost exclusive, province of the university and of research and learning conducted there.
Autodidactism also had its dark side, since an intellectual universe created from one's own variegated readings and preferred opinion often lacked a moral component, and often went with ethical solipsism.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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