Title of article
John Dewey and the Mutual Influence of Democracy and Education
Author/Authors
David Fott، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
13
From page
7
To page
19
Abstract
For Dewey education is the growth of mental powers, where "growth" has no fixed content but involves the increasing harmonization of individuals with society. That harmonization must respect the uniqueness of each person and his capacity for intelligence. Education aims to develop a model democratic society, which Dewey sees as similar to an ideal community of scientific inquirers. That comparison is highly questionable, however. Deweyʹs curricular emphases include science, geography, history, literature, and fine arts, the last two of which promote a greater appreciation for all of human life—provided society is not too separated into classes. Related to social division is what he considers the false problems of epistemology, with its separation between mind and world. But Deweyʹs failure to think more rigorously about the relation of philosophy to science makes his philosophy a poor bulwark against postmodernism.
Journal title
The Review of Politics
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
The Review of Politics
Record number
678936
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