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Fei, Wei – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This paper aims to explore the relationship between Karl Marx's concept of justice and Martha Nussbaum's capabilities approach. Nusbaum follows the Aristotelian idea of man as a political animal, which is intrinsically consistent with Marx's view of human nature, but she provides us with a new normative perspective to reconsider Marxism. When she…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Correlation, Justice, Educational Philosophy
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Petrovic, John E.; Kuntz, Aaron M. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
The authors present a materialist analysis of the effects of neoliberalism in education. Specifically, they contend that neoliberalism is a form of cultural invasion that begets necrophilia. Neoliberalism is necrophilous in promoting a cultural desire to fix fluid systems and processes. Such desire manufactures both individuals known and…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Alienation, Cultural Influences, Political Attitudes
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Irwin, Ruth; White, Te Haumoana – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
Exosomatic memory is a crucial phase in the evolution of humanity because it enables learning to take place across groups and generations rather than exclusively through lived experience or one on one transmission. Exosomatic memory is the attribution of knowledge to objects, such as art or writing, which allows epistemology to be transmitted…
Descriptors: Climate, Ethnic Groups, Indigenous Populations, Educational Philosophy
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Peters, Michael A.; Neilson, David – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Marx developed a sophisticated theory of labour under capitalism's expanding reproduction but wrote little specifically on immaterial labour. This paper reflects on how to build from Marx's writings a more comprehensive theory of immaterial labour. Integral to this theorisation is bringing in young Marx's writings on alienation and human nature,…
Descriptors: Creativity, Social Systems, Labor, Political Attitudes
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Tsang, Kwok Kuen; Lian, Yi; Zhu, Zhiyong – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
This study uses a Marxist perspective to investigate Hong Kong students' alienation from learning. Alienated learners find learning to be a meaningless, disempowering, and estranging activity. Fifteen Hong Kong undergraduate students were invited to join a photovoice project in which they actively took, shared, and discussed photographs of their…
Descriptors: Self Determination, Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes, Alienation
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Bradley, Joff P. N. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
At first glance a Russian anarchist's revolutionary address to the youth of his day made in the late 19th century and the address to youth made by a contemporary French philosopher may appear to have little in common as their context and era are ostensibly very different. How would Petr Kropotkin's address be understood in our time? Are…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Information Technology, Social Systems, Social Change
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Hassan, Robert – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Pervasive digitality reveals us as analogue creatures that are unprepared for a world and a logic generated increasingly through automation. Promulgated by capitalism, digitality has created a new form of alienation, one far more powerful and comprehensive than that envisaged by either Marx or Lukács in the analogue-industrial age. Digital…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Automation, Information Technology, Alienation
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Fraser-Burgess, Sheron Andrea; Warren-Gordon, Kiesha; Humphrey, Jr., David L.; Lowery, Kendra – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
The article draws on critiques in political theory and morality to argue that womanism, a worldview rooted in Black women's lives and history, provides an alternative conceptual framework to prevailing Eurocentric thinking, for promoting socially just institutions of higher education. Presupposing a positioned, encultured, and embodied account of…
Descriptors: Criticism, Moral Values, Social Justice, Females
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Scott, Alan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
This article is both a personal response to Samuel Beckett's "Waiting for Godot" and an examination of the concept within literature of making the strange familiar and making the familiar strange. It discusses the educative force and potential of Beckett's strangers in a strange world by examining my own personal experiences…
Descriptors: Drama, Twentieth Century Literature, Familiarity, Alienation