Peter Lin: English teacher of Jian-De high school in
Keelung cityVincent Hsu: graduate student of TKU, English departmentDate: 4/18/2007Location: Class 301, Jian-De high school
V: You grew up in
Salem village, a very small village lacking of studying materials. By your late teens you had already decided to become a teacher-philosopher. What prompted this decision?
P: This first thing I have to say is that teaching was not my first choice. An old thesis developed by Claude Levi-Strauss affirms that every philosopher had another profession at which he failed and that failure then marked his entire being.
V: …….
P: Ha Ha Ha. My young pupil. For Levi-Strauss, his first choice was to be a musician. This was his kind of constitutive melancholy gloss. So my original decision was to be a philosopher. Being a teacher was kind of a secondary choice, the second best thing.
V: What did you understand to be the purpose of teacher and your role as a teacher?
P: Ha Ha Ha! I don’t think there was a clear vision of your question. Let me quote Lacanian statement to answer you, ‘it was something in me more than myself which decided,’ because I have no a clear idea. But I understand the central point that teaching is simply a kind of megalomaniac enterprise—you know.
V:…..
P: (smiling)
V: To what extent have the parameters of teaching-philosophy shifted in contemporary era?
P: I don’t think that philosophy can any longer play any of its traditional roles, as in establishing students’ characteristic, constructing students’ philosophical thinking, and so on. Rather, teachers in our time simply fulfil their task to educate one expertise.
V: So your anxiety is that the latter role is more necessary than ever today?
P: Our time is one in which we are increasingly confronted with exterior temptation that causes students lose their creativity, and with immature educational constitution that makes teachers cannot develop themselves completely.
V: Please give some advice, since I decide to be a teacher in the future.
P: God bless you!
All answers was given by Peter Lin were insoluble. I never expected that Dr. Lin would leave so many to contemplate, even though when I was a high school student, I had known that he was a philosopher. It seems that I have a conversation with Plato. I really learned a lot from him. He talked about that a teacher is like a megalomaniac and this makes me impressed. In my opinion, what he wants to say is that a teacher always takes too much responsibility on himself. A teacher usually thinks that he can do many things—to teach student elementary knowledge, to help students their daily life and so on. A teacher always worries about his students. This question really confuses me a lot. Is that right for a teacher like this?


