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Inon, Magen – Ethics and Education, 2019
Research shows that various pharmaceuticals can offer modest cognition enhancing effects for healthy individuals. These finding have caused some academics to support liberal use of pharmacological cognitive enhancement (PCE) in schools and universities. This approach partially arises from arguments implying there is little moral justification for…
Descriptors: Pharmacology, Drug Use, Cognitive Ability, Moral Values
Spiegel, James S. – Theory and Research in Education, 2012
Among those who regard open-mindedness as a virtue, there is dispute over whether the trait is essentially an attitude toward particular beliefs or toward oneself as a believer. I defend William Hare's account of open-mindedness as a first-order attitude toward one's beliefs and critique Peter Gardner's view of open-mindedness as a non-commital…
Descriptors: Intellectual Development, Beliefs, Attitudes, Epistemology
Hand, Michael – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2014
In other work I have argued that decisions about what to teach directively and what non-directively should be governed by an epistemic criterion. Trevor Cooling has recently advanced some objections to my defence and application of the epistemic criterion and proposed an alternative to it. Here I reply to his objections and comment on his proposed…
Descriptors: Religion, Religious Factors, Teaching Methods, Epistemology
Barnett, Ronald – Policy Futures in Education, 2013
In collaborative ventures in higher education are to be seen both potentials and risks. But how, then, is collaboration to be understood? Is it simply a matter of a point of view, with individuals focusing more on the potentials or more on the risks, depending on their dispositions? The risks and potentials of collaboration, it might be suggested,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Institutional Cooperation, Risk, Figurative Language
Battaly, Heather – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2013
This article argues that the Seven Solutions in the US, and the Research Excellence Framework in the UK, manifest the vice of epistemic insensibility. Section I provides an overview of Aristotle's analysis of moral vice in people. Section II applies Aristotle's analysis to epistemic vice, developing an account of epistemic insensibility. In so…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Policy, Epistemology, Comparative Education
Lang, James C. – Educational Theory, 2011
Epistemologies of situated knowledges, advanced by scholars such as Donna Haraway, Lorraine Code, and Maureen Ford, challenge mainstream epistemology's claim to be the gold standard in determining what counts as knowledge. In this essay, James Lang uses the work of these and other feminist theorists to explicate the notion of situated knowledges…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Postmodernism, Feminism, Learning Processes
Holma, Katariina – Educational Theory, 2011
The crucial epistemological question for formulating the principles that underlie moral education concerns the status of rationality and objectivity in ethics and education. In this essay Katariina Holma argues that the intertwined understanding of the concepts of education, ethics, rationality, and objectivity is built into our language and our…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Values Education, Moral Values
McNiff, Jean – Educational Action Research, 2011
We speak about the need for critical reflection on practice, but what do we do when we do it; and how do we explain how and why we should do it? This paper explores these issues, and itself acts as the site for an exploration and explanation of what it means to be critically reflective. Drawing on recent research in Qatar, I give an account of how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Quality, Reflective Teaching, Epistemology
Kerr, Donald; Mandzuk, David; Raptis, Helen – Canadian Journal of Education, 2011
This paper argues that the social foundations of education, and particularly the disciplines of history, philosophy and sociology of education, must continue to play an integral role in programs of teacher education. We report on the decline of the study of history of education within Faculties of Education in Canada as an example of the…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Educational Sociology, Educational History, Foreign Countries
Biesta, Gert J. J. – Education and Culture, 2009
This purpose of this paper is to indicate how one should understand John Dewey's attention to and appreciation for the methods and views of modern science. Against the idea that Dewey is a believer in the methods and views of modern science--which would make his philosophy into a form of positivism or scientism--the author argues that Dewey's…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Sciences, Pragmatics, Scientific Methodology
Vokey, Daniel – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
Drawing upon my critical appropriation of Alasdair MacIntyre's account of the rationality of traditions, I undertake to explain and demonstrate how the competing conceptual frameworks of distinct traditions of educational inquiry and practice can be assessed through dialectical argument. To illustrate the "method" of dialectic, I argue that the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Human Services, Ethics, Teaching Methods
Semetsky, Inna – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
This paper situates moral education in the context of Gilles Deleuze's philosophy and as embedded in lived experience qualified by three dimensions, namely critical, clinical, and creative ("3C"). The construct of "3C" education will be enriched by reference to the theoretical corpus of Nel Noddings, specifically her 2006 book "Critical Lessons:…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Values Education, Epistemology, Educational Philosophy
Munday, Ian – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
This paper explores Stanley Cavell's notion of "passionate utterance", which acts as an extension of/departure from (we might read it as both) J. L. Austin's theory of the performative. Cavell argues that Austin having made the revolutionary discovery that truth claims in language are bound up with how words perform, then gets bogged by convention…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Homosexuality, Rhetorical Theory, Moral Values
Musschenga, Albert W. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
In this article I examine the consequences of the dominance of intuitive thinking in moral judging and deciding for the role of moral reasoning in moral education. I argue that evidence for the reliability of moral intuitions is lacking. We cannot determine when we can trust our intuitive moral judgements. Deliberate and critical reasoning is…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Moral Values, Moral Development, Values Education
Gambescia, Stephen F. – Health Education & Behavior, 2007
While we have several hallmarks of a mature profession, does this include a well-articulated "Philosophy of Health Education?" High-order questions should be important to both practitioners and researchers in health education. This address outlines why it is important for us to have a philosophy of health education, an approach that we could take…
Descriptors: Health Education, Health Promotion, Democracy, Public Health