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Christensen, Bo Allesøe – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2023
The aim of the article is to theoretically develop a notion of digital "Bildung" that accepts the "world" of today as characterised by the entanglement of humans and technology. I draw on Adorno's critical notion of "Bildung," Luciano Floridi's and Katherine Hayles' respective understandings of the human-technology…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Social Theories, Semantics, Man Machine Systems
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Barbara Applebaum – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
This essay begins with the story of Vincent Lloyd who recounts a disturbing experience he had while teaching a course to a group of students of color. What does pedagogical uptake under conditions of systemic oppression require of educators? In the first section, I explore philosopher Nancy Potter's (Nancy Potter. "Giving Uptake".…
Descriptors: Credibility, Intelligibility, Educational Practices, Social Justice
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Dahlbeck, Johan – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2021
This article turns to the neglected pedagogical concept of "ingenium" in order to address some shortcomings of the admiration-emulation model of Linda Zabzebski's influential exemplarist moral theory. I will start by introducing the problem of the admiration-emulation model by way of a fictional example. I will then briefly outline the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Moral Values, Social Theories
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Bazzul, Jesse – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2018
Research that explores ethics can help educational communities engage twenty-first century crises and work toward ecologically and socially just forms of life. Integral to this research is an engagement with social theory, which helps educators imagine our shared worlds differently. In this paper I present two theoretical-methodological directions…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Anthropology, Self Concept
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Sidorkin, Alexander M. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2019
Baumol's cost disease explains rising costs in education without corresponding increase in productivity. The philosophical meaning of it is in the phenomenon of relational labor that is at the core of education. Its productivity remains constant while cost increases. The total size of education as a non-progressive sector will continue to expand,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Costs, Productivity
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Tosas, Mar Rosàs – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2016
In this paper we claim educational leadership as an autonomous discipline whose goals and strategies should not mirror those typical of business and political leadership. In order to define the aims proper to educational leadership we question three common assumptions of what it is supposed to carry out. First, we turn to Hannah Arendt and her…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Leadership Role, Role of Education, Criticism
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Popp, Jerome A. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2015
John Dewey's famous early twentieth-century account of the relationship between education as growth and democratic societies, presented in Democracy and Education, was later rejected by him, because it failed to properly identify the role of societal structures in growth and experience. In the later Ethics, Dewey attempts to correct that…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Individual Development, Institutional Role, Social Theories
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Eastman, Nicholas J.; Anderson, Morgan; Boyles, Deron – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2017
Simply put, charter schools have not lived up to their advocates' promise of equity. Using examples of tangible civil rights gains of the twentieth century (e.g. "Brown v. Board," "Lau v. Nichols") and extending feminist theories of invisible labor to include the labor of democracy, the authors argue that the charter movement…
Descriptors: School Choice, Charter Schools, Politics of Education, Educational Change
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Vorhaus, John – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2014
Social capital is frequently offered up as a variable to explain such educational outcomes as academic attainment, drop-out rates and cognitive development. Yet, despite its popularity amongst social scientists, social capital theory remains the object of some scepticism, particularly in respect of its explanatory ambitions. I provide an account…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Educational Attainment, Social Theories, Educational Theories
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Fleming, Ted – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2012
The legacy of the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research has been a powerful force for critically understanding social reality. Erich Fromm was one of the early and best known members of the Institute. Fromm emphasised the centrality of culture and interpersonal relations in the construction of the psyche. The unconscious was not only the…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Democracy, Psychiatry
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Richardson, Troy A. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2012
This essay works to bridge conversations in philosophy of education with decolonial theory. The author considers Margonis' (1999, 2011a, b) use of Rousseau (1979) and Heidegger (1962) in developing an ontological attitude that counters social hierarchies and promotes anti-colonial relations. While affirming this effort, the essay outlines a…
Descriptors: American Indians, Foreign Policy, Social Stratification, African Americans
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Pedersen, Helena – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2012
What happens to education when the potential it helps realizing in the individual works against the formal purposes of the curriculum? What happens when education becomes a vehicle for its own subversion? As a subject-forming state apparatus working on ideological speciesism, formal education is engaged in both human and animal stratification in…
Descriptors: Ideology, Animals, Critical Theory, Postmodernism
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Nelsen, Peter – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2010
This paper argues for a conception of autonomy that takes social oppression seriously without sapping autonomy of its valuable focus on individual self-direction. Building on recent work in relational accounts of autonomy, the paper argues that current conceptions of autonomy from liberal, feminist and critical theorists do not adequately account…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Professional Autonomy, Theories, Beliefs
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Huttunen, Rauno – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2012
An individual is in the lowest phase of moral development if he thinks only of his own personal interest and has only his own selfish agenda in his mind as he encounters other humans. This lowest phase corresponds well with sixteenth century British moral egoism which reflects the rise of the new economic order. Adam Smith (1723-1790) wanted to…
Descriptors: World Views, Freedom, Altruism, Moral Development
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Hansen, David T. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2010
In this article, I map current conceptions of cosmopolitanism and sketch distinctions between the concept and humanism and multiculturalism. The differences mirror what I take to be a central motif of cosmopolitanism: the capacity to fuse reflective openness to the new with reflective loyalty to the known. This motif invites a reconsideration of…
Descriptors: Reflection, Social Environment, World Views, Social Theories
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