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Matthew J. Kisner – Theory and Research in Education, 2024
This article's question is whether Spinoza understands the highest human perfection -- which he equates with both our highest good and the love of God -- as a theoretical state, consisting in having knowledge and the perfection of beliefs, or as a practical state, consisting in having virtue and the perfection of action. Consequently, the article…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Ethical Instruction, Individual Development, Role of Education
Steven Nadler – Theory and Research in Education, 2024
Part Five of Spinoza's "Ethics" includes a notoriously challenging set of propositions about human perfection. Part of the difficulty in interpreting these elements of the work arises from neglecting important philosophical background for the relevant propositions, namely, medieval Jewish rationalism and Maimonides in particular. Spinoza…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Ethics, Individual Development, Transformative Learning
Julie R. Klein – Theory and Research in Education, 2024
This article develops the ideas of perfection and education in Spinoza and Maimonides. Both thinkers identify human perfection with intellectual knowledge and a transformation in affect. They accordingly envision education in terms of enhancing cognition and shaping the desire to know. The first steps are a critical evaluation of imagination and…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Epistemology, Learning Processes, Logical Thinking
Karpen, Samuel C. – Journal of Transformative Education, 2022
In an appeal to establish transformative learning's (TL) boundaries, Kegan (2000) implored researchers to identify "what from transforms?" As a social psychologist, I am particularly drawn to theorists who identify the self as the form that transforms; however, I argue that a model of the self that specifies how it is represented in…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Transformative Learning, Learning Theories, Self Concept
Gordon, James R. – Educational Theory, 2020
If the received views on self-transformation in philosophical literature are correct, then either self-transformation (1) is caused by forces beyond oneself and beyond one's control, (2) is not rational to pursue, or (3) does not ever really happen. In this essay, James Gordon highlights the philosophical puzzle known as the…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Self Actualization, Individual Development, Philosophy
Kemp, Ryan S. – Educational Theory, 2020
In this essay Ryan Kemp makes an unlikely case for value stability, arguing that people should almost never aspire to become radically different and that, given this, some people should be reluctant to pursue educational experiences that wildly broaden their life possibilities. His account is developed and structured around two borrowed examples,…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Aspiration, Individual Development, Decision Making
Akenson, Ashley B.; Arce-Trigatti, Andrea; Akenson, James E. – Journal of Transformative Education, 2022
Transformative education exists in a complex, dynamic, and ambiguous state seeking structural definitions and relationships within an interdisciplinary arena often critiqued for its limitations as an individual--rather than social--practice. This type of education encompasses learning processes that may facilitate the development of civic-minded,…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Civics, Leadership Training, Individual Development
Yacek, Douglas W. – Journal of Moral Education, 2020
It has become commonplace within the educational research community to invoke the transformative power of education. The call to adopt a 'transformative' approach to teaching and learning can be heard in fields as different as adult education and school leadership and as estranged as social justice education and educational psychology. While there…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Transformative Learning, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
Tan, Charlene – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
This paper compares the educational thought of Paulo Freire and Confucius on what it means to be more fully human. Both Freire and Confucius object to the dehumanisation of human beings through the banking concept of education and other oppressive practices. They argue for the ontological vocation of becoming more fully human through humanisation…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Confucianism, Educational Philosophy, Humanism
Thornton, Simone – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
The struggle to become lucid is at the heart of The Myth of Sisyphus. To understand the absurd is to understand that the fit between our conception of the world and the world itself is fraught with uncertainty; lucidity is the elucidation of the absurd. To be lucid is to revolt against the type of certainty that leads to suffering; to revolt…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Role of Education, Educational Philosophy, Moral Development
Kouppanou, Anna – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
In this article, I set up a Heideggerian framework of research in order to investigate the phenomenon of "looking at the smartphone screen," focusing especially on "the desire to look," which I see as intricately connected with "the desire to know" and "the desire to be." With a clear phenomenological…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Phenomenology
Matolino, Bernard – Transformation in Higher Education, 2020
Philosophy teachers owe their students a little more than mere formal instruction of topics popular in philosophy. What they owe their students is largely influenced by philosophy's claims to be a discipline that is principally dedicated to the study and fostering of wisdom. Therefore, there is an obligation to be wise on the part of philosophy…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Individual Development, Transformative Learning
Tan, Charlene – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
This article seeks to clarify the purpose of high-stakes exam and its relationship with teaching and learning by elucidating the educational thought of the eminent neo-Confucian thinker Zhu Xi. The paper contends that Zhu Xi views standardised testing as an essential means to evaluate the learning outcomes, honour exemplary scholars and select…
Descriptors: High Stakes Tests, Confucianism, Educational Philosophy, Standardized Tests
Hedley, Douglas – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
In this article, the "Bild" or image of the sculptor used by Plotinus and adapted by his Christian follower Meister Eckhart forms the basis of a reflection on the religious or otherworldly dimension in ethics (as opposed to a reductionist or functionalist conception of ethics with its focus on human happiness in the sense of worldly…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Christianity, Religious Factors, Ethics
Carr-Chellman, Davin J.; Kroth, Michael – International Journal of Adult Vocational Education and Technology, 2017
Spiritual disciplines are practices of transformation intentionally pursued through the day-to-day actions of deeper living. The spiritual disciplines are conceptualized here in their relationship to profound learning. The authors contend that profound learners exhibit certain dispositions, such as curiosity, that facilitate continual growth.…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Transformative Learning, Learning Processes, Intentional Learning