Metodo

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Series | Book | Chapter

191999

Abstract

The term epilogue derives from the Greek epilogos, the concluding or perorating part (Gr. epi-, in addition) of speech (Gr. logos). In more recent times, the term also denotes the concluding part of a literary work, a summary. An interesting form of an epilogue consists in the metalogue, a conversation that takes previous conversations or text to take it to another level (Bateson, 1980). Metalogue literally is talk about talk, meta-talk.

Publication details

Published in:

Mukhopadhyay Swapna, Roth Wolff-Michael (2012) Alternative forms of knowing (in) mathematics: celebrations of diversity of mathematical practices. Rotterdam, SensePublishers.

Pages: 313-323

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-6091-921-3_16

Full citation:

Mukhopadhyay Swapna, Roth Wolff-Michael, Greer Brian (2012) „Epilogue“, In: S. Mukhopadhyay & W. Roth (eds.), Alternative forms of knowing (in) mathematics, Rotterdam, SensePublishers, 313–323.