Habits of Mind: An Introduction to the Philosophy of EducationiUniverse, 2000 - 584 من الصفحات This stimulating new work is based on a highly-successful--and extremely popular--course which Professor De Nicolas has taught at the State University of New York at Stony Brook for over 15 years. In "Habits of Mind," De Nicolas reveals that the most important achievement of education is to develop in students those skills that enable them to participate fully in the life of humankind. He calls these skills the "inner technologies", and intends by the phrase something very different from congnitive skills. Education, he claims, must nurture the capacity for fantasy and imagination. In "Habits of Mind," he traces the relative importance of these capacities through the history and philosophy of education from Plato onward. The habits of intellectual discourse are treated as an organic thread from the ancient past to the present. |
المحتوى
Higher Education Today | 3 |
Our Philosophical Roots | 19 |
An Alternative Philosophy of Education | 32 |
An Alternative University | 52 |
The Medieval Version of Aristotle | 71 |
Modernity with Galileo Descartes Newton | 135 |
Locke Rousseau Marquis de Sade | 163 |
Vico Voltaire | 250 |
John Dewey José Ortega | 292 |
Socrates Plato the Poets | 435 |
SummaryPhilosophies of Education | 531 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activity acts Aristotle become believe body Cacambo called Candide cause child concept culture Cunegonde Descartes Dewey dialogues exercise existence experience external fact faculty freedom give Glaucon Greek habits of mind Hegel human hypotheses Hypotheses non fingo ideas images imagination individual intellectual intelligence Jesuit John Dewey judgment justice kind knowledge language laws live logical Marquis de Sade masses matter means method moral Myth of Er nature never objects Opticks organization Pangloss Peiraeus person Phaedo Phaedrus philosophy physical piastres Plato Polemarchus political possible present principle problem propositions Pythagoras question reason religion replied Republic scientific scientific method scientists sense social society Socrates soul speak taught teacher teaching theory things thought Thrasymachus tion tradition true truth understand virtue Voltaire whole words