Civil Society, Education and Human Formation

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Adorno
Benedict XVI
Buddhism
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Catholic Intellectual Tradition
Catholic University
Catholicism
Civil Society
Classical Bildung
Confucianism
Constrained Disagreement
Constructive Alignment
Contemporary Moral Debate
Contemporary Research University
Corde Ecclesiae
critical consciousness
Democratic Civil Society
Epistemological Crisis
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Foucault
Freire's Work
Freire’s Work
Friere
Good Life
holistic pedagogy
Jecko Bello
John G. Quilter
Jun Zi
Karol Wojtyla
MacIntyre's Account
MacIntyre's Critique
MacIntyre's Theory
MacIntyre’s Account
MacIntyre’s Critique
MacIntyre’s Theory
McIntyre
Moral Enquiry
neoliberalism critique
Notre Dame Australia
P. Co Alfredo
Peter Roberts
Philip Matthews
philosophical approaches to human formation
Philosophy
philosophy of education
Ranier Carlo V. Abengana
Rational Vindication
Renee Kohler-Ryan
Ricour
S. J. Noel Sheth
Sandy Lynch
Scientia Sexualis
Steven Stolz
values education
Vice Versa
virtue ethics
Wendyl Luna
William Sweet
Wladyslaw Zuziak
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367595258
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Education has been widely criticised as being too narrowly focused on skills, capacities and the transference of knowledge that can be used in the workplace. As a result of the dominance of economic rationalism and neo-liberalism, it has become commodified and marketed to potential customers. As a consequence, students have become consumers of an educational product and education has become an industry. There is deep dissatisfaction with these neo-liberal developments. What is missing is any conception of education as a key factor in the ‘human formation’ that will lead students to develop the virtues and values that they will need to not only lead successful lives, but also be responsible members of their communities — working for the common good and acting to transform them into just societies.

This volume draws together a number of different perspectives on what is meant by ‘human formation’, argues that for a much richer conception of education, and addresses the lack of attention to human fulfilment. It also highlights the importance of philosophy in the articulation of novel ways of conceptualising education — providing alternatives to the dominant neo-liberal and economic rationalist models. The central question with which the book is concerned is a renewed understanding of education as the formation of persons, of civil society and the role of philosophy in fostering that renewal.

In this volume there are a variety of voices from diverse traditions and cultures. Both East and West are represented and it might be expected that this would result in a divergence of opinion about the purpose of education. However, in spite of the diversity, there is some significant convergence in thinking about the ways in which education ought to serve the needs of both the individual and their communities. What is also particularly useful, and what is fresh about the essays presented here, is that there is also diversity in the philosophical approaches to the problem. This means that the convergence on the importance of ‘human formation’ as the cornerstone of education does not rely on a privileged philosophical method.

Jānis (John) Tālivaldis Ozoliņš, M.Sc., Ph.D., Dip. Ed. (Melbourne), G. Dip. Ed. Admin. (Deakin), FHERDSA, FPESA, FACE, Foreign Member of the Latvian Academy of Sciences, is Professor of Philosophy at Australian Catholic University and permanent Honorary Fellow of the Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia. His teaching and research interests include eastern philosophy, metaphysics of Aquinas, applied ethics and bioethics, social and political philosophy and the philosophy of education.