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Education, Self-consciousness and Social Action - Bildung as a Neo-Hegelian Concept (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,197
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Education, Self-consciousness and Social Action - Bildung as a Neo-Hegelian Concept (Paperback)
Series: Routledge International Studies in the Philosophy of Education
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Education, Self-consciousness and Social Action reconstructs the
Hegelian concept of education, Bildung, and shows that this concept
could serve as a powerful alternative to current psychologist
notions of learning. Taking a Hegelian perspective, Stojanov claims
that Bildung should be interpreted as growth of mindedness and that
such a growth has two central and interrelated components,
including the development of self-consciousness toward conceptual
self-articulation and the formation of one's capacity for
intelligent social action. The interrelation between the two
central components of education implies that learning is
transformed into education only when it involves the
self-consciousness and the identity of the learner. Since both are
grounded in the ethical beliefs and values of the individual,
transforming learning into education therefore requires that
education also address students' everyday ethical assumptions, as
well as their articulation and conceptualization. This claim has a
number of implications for educational policy and pedagogy; one
being that learning and teaching in schools are educative only if
they have ethical significance for both students and teachers.
Another implication is that the point of departure for educative
teaching becomes the actual, everyday ethical beliefs and
experiences of the students, rather than fixed curricular contents.
Students' encountering with sciences and arts should aim at the
conceptual articulation of those beliefs and experiences - an
articulation which makes individual's rational autonomy and
self-determination possible. Education, Self-consciousness and
Social Action will be of great interest to academics, researchers
and postgraduate students interested in the philosophy of
education. It should also be essential reading for anyone engaged
in the study of Hegel's work.
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