This study re-examines John Dewey’s philosophy of education, and asks how well it stands up today in view of developments in Continental European philosophy. Do Martin Heidegger’s statements on the nature of thinking compel a re-examination of Dewey’s view? Does Hans-Georg Gadamer’s philosophy of experience advance beyond Dewey’s experimental model? How does a Deweyan view of moral or political education look in light of Hannah Arendt’s theory of judgment, or Paulo Freires’s theory of dialogical education? Part One of this study looks at Dewey’s conceptions of experience and thinking in connection with two of the most important figures in twentieth-century phenomenology and hermeneutics: Heidegger and Gadamer. It also returns to an old distinction in the philosophy of education between progressivism and conservatism, in order to situate and clarify Dewey’s position and to frame the argument of this book. Part Two applies this principled framework to the teaching of several disciplines of the human sciences: philosophy, religion, ethics, politics, history, and literature. These are discussed with reference to the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, John Caputo, Hannah Arendt, Paulo Freire, Michel Foucault, and Paul Ricoeur.
Author(s): Paul Fairfield
Year: 2009
Language: English
Pages: 320
Education After Dewey......Page 2
Contents......Page 4
Introduction......Page 7
PART 1. The Educative Process......Page 18
1. Beyond Progressivism and Conservatism......Page 20
2. Dewey’s Copernican Revolution......Page 59
3. What Is Called Thinking?......Page 108
PART 2. Education in the Human Sciences......Page 154
4. Teaching Philosophy: The Scholastic and the Thinker......Page 156
5. Teaching Religion: Spiritual Training or Indoctrination?......Page 190
6. Teaching Ethics: From Moralism to Experimentalism......Page 217
7. Teaching Politics: Training for Democratic Citizenship......Page 240
8. Teaching History: The Past and the Present......Page 264
9. Teaching Literature: Life and Narrative......Page 287
Index......Page 312