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This volume critically and constructively discusses philosophical
questions which have particular bearing on the formulation of
educational aims. The book is divided into three major parts: the
first deals with the nature of education, and discusses the various
general aims, such as 'mental health', 'socialization' and
'creativity' which have been thought to characterize it; the second
section is concerned with the nature of reason and its relationship
to feeling, will and action; finally the development of different
aspects of reason in an educational context is considered.
The papers in this volume provide a coherent philosophical study of
a group of important and pressing educational issues such as the
selection of objectives for less able children, the fundamental
characteristics of teaching and the integration of the curriculum.
A thesis on the necessary differentiation of knowledge into
logically distinct forms is outlined, and is defended against
recent philosophical criticisms. Its implications for curriculum
planning are examined, with particular reference to the urgent
problems of adeqately characterizing liberal education and those
forms of moral and religious education that are appropriate in
maintained schools.
This volume critically and constructively discusses philosophical
questions which have particular bearing on the formulation of
educational aims. The book is divided into three major parts: the
first deals with the nature of education, and discusses the various
general aims, such as 'mental health', 'socialization' and
'creativity' which have been thought to characterize it; the second
section is concerned with the nature of reason and its relationship
to feeling, will and action; finally the development of different
aspects of reason in an educational context is considered.
The papers in this volume provide a coherent philosophical study
of a group of important and pressing educational issues such as the
selection of objectives for less able children, the fundamental
characteristics of teaching and the integration of the curriculum.
A thesis on the necessary differentiation of knowledge into
logically distinct forms is outlined, and is defended against
recent philosophical criticisms. Its implications for curriculum
planning are examined, with particular reference to the urgent
problems of adeqately characterizing liberal education and those
forms of moral and religious education that are appropriate in
maintained schools.
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