Educational theory is necessarily concerned with what it means to
become human, ‘becoming’ implying a process of growth and change.
In general, philosophy of education has tended to view childhood
(defined as the period during which one is being educated) as
preparation for a settled period as adult citizen, during which
one’s human nature is given its full expression. Traditionally,
then, first we become human, then we are (fully) human. However, when
we speak of ourselves as human, we do so in these two senses: as a
present species marker, and as a regulative ideal. Most literature
focuses on the former sense; the present argument will focus on the
latter. What, therefore, should be the grounds for a theory of the
individual in society and the world that can best underpin approaches
to social policy and education on the assumption that the human animal
is always aspiring to fully human status that can never be attained?
Central to the argument are the acknowledgment of the human as an open
system and the concomitant acceptance of overlapping phenomenal
worlds, whereby experience is shared but never exactly duplicated
between sentient beings.ent beings
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Semiosis and the Myth of Reason
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9789460919978
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter