CORE THEME: KNOWLEDGE AND THE KNOWER
After 16 years of life experience and more than a decade of formal education behind them, TOK students are knowers—in medias res―already in the thick of the action. TOK allows them to step back from the relentless daily acquisition of knowledge to ask: “how we know what we claim to know?” The Knowledge and the Knower core theme challenges students to reflect on themselves as knowers and thinkers, and to consider the extent of the influences of different kinds of communities of knowers to which they belong.
The units that follow consist of hands-on class activities and generative Knowledge Questions. They are arranged loosely according to the official TOK framework—Scope, Perspectives, Methods and Tools, and Ethics. The activities build on the introductory classes in Starting TOK.
I. SCOPE—WHAT COUNTS AS KNOWLEDGE?
Starting TOK
Student knowledge claims
The Map is not the Territory
The Allegory of the Cave
Parable of the blind men and the elephant
Just a minute
Knowing that and knowing how
Justified true belief
Coherence, correspondence and pragmatic theories of truth
Good and bad explanations
Instantiation—where is knowledge?
Immense, entropic universe becoming aware of itself
Ii. PERSPECTIVES
Figs from multiple viewpoints
Interpretation—what’s happening?
What do little kids know?
Octopus intelligence
Sentience continuum
Feral children and forbidden experiments
Active sense perception
What is it like to be a bat?
III. TOOLS
Unreliability of eyewitness reporting
Intuition
Belief without evidence
Pascal's wager
Iii. ETHICS
Ethics vs. morality
Apprenticeship in ethics
Vera Drake: saint or serial killer?
The Seven Deadly Sins
Deontological demystified