On the one hand, according to Richard Rorty, Paulo Freire and others, education is the practice of freedom. On the other hand, according to Michael Foucault, Mary Midgley and others, ethics is the practice of freedom. How, then, are education and ethics related to one another and what do these authors mean by ‘the practice of freedom’? In this piece, I argue that education and ethics are two mutually constitutive aspects of the practice of freedom. Individuals who are able to engage in this practice can most properly be said to be the authors of their lives, that is, individuals who, to borrow from Neil MacGregor, are able to find their ‘place in things’. To find our ‘place in things’ is to do the necessary educative work required for becom...
This article examines the issue of the ethical status of education, particularly as related to indiv...
In this speculative philosophical article, I consider what sense of educational ethics emerges under...
This conceptual essay, which opens the special issue, examines why a student’s right to freedom of e...
On the one hand, according to Richard Rorty, Paulo Freire and others, education is the practice of f...
Education as a practice in its own right (or sui generis practice) invokes quite a different set of...
This article is the second of a two-part investigation, the first part of which was published in Et...
This article is the second of a two-part investigation, the first part of which was published in Et...
This is the second editorial of the journal Theology and Philosophy of Education, a journal for the ...
This article considers the multifaceted concept of ethics and how, despite being a familiar notion w...
The paper begins with some introductory remarks that explain why understanding education as a coher...
For centuries, the major story of enlightenment was that education is and should be the cornerstone ...
John Dewey was arguably the most influential philosopher of education in the twentieth century. The ...
In this reflective paper, I respond to Dr. Matusov’s (2020) eloquent philosophical exploration of “s...
This article examines the relevance of modern moral philosophy to education, with particular referen...
This thesis considers the idea of freedom in education. It attempts to show how prevalent conception...
This article examines the issue of the ethical status of education, particularly as related to indiv...
In this speculative philosophical article, I consider what sense of educational ethics emerges under...
This conceptual essay, which opens the special issue, examines why a student’s right to freedom of e...
On the one hand, according to Richard Rorty, Paulo Freire and others, education is the practice of f...
Education as a practice in its own right (or sui generis practice) invokes quite a different set of...
This article is the second of a two-part investigation, the first part of which was published in Et...
This article is the second of a two-part investigation, the first part of which was published in Et...
This is the second editorial of the journal Theology and Philosophy of Education, a journal for the ...
This article considers the multifaceted concept of ethics and how, despite being a familiar notion w...
The paper begins with some introductory remarks that explain why understanding education as a coher...
For centuries, the major story of enlightenment was that education is and should be the cornerstone ...
John Dewey was arguably the most influential philosopher of education in the twentieth century. The ...
In this reflective paper, I respond to Dr. Matusov’s (2020) eloquent philosophical exploration of “s...
This article examines the relevance of modern moral philosophy to education, with particular referen...
This thesis considers the idea of freedom in education. It attempts to show how prevalent conception...
This article examines the issue of the ethical status of education, particularly as related to indiv...
In this speculative philosophical article, I consider what sense of educational ethics emerges under...
This conceptual essay, which opens the special issue, examines why a student’s right to freedom of e...