A Situated Philosophy of Education
Abstract
Philosophy of education today is broadly divided between two fundamentally
different views about the nature of philosophy itself. This meta-debate is almost
never engaged directly, and yet it is exemplified in one way or another in many of
the paradigmatic disagreements we have with one another. One view is typified by
Thomas Nagel’s phrase, “the view from nowhere”: on this account, philosophy’s
virtue as a mode of inquiry is its distanced objectivity, its commitment to timeless
standards of argument and reason, and its recurring attention to fundamental
questions of truth, value, and meaning that establish continuity across philosophers
from before Socrates to the present day. The other view is a radically historicized
account of philosophy as the expression of worldviews within a particular cultural
and historical context, always partisan and implicated in social dynamics of power,
and merely contingent in its ability to persuade or compel assent — there is nothing
“timeless” about it. Few espouse these views in such extreme forms, but we believe they will be
basically familiar to all. Our project here is to sketch a broadly pragmatist alternative
to this dichotomy, as other pragmatists, like John Dewey, have tried to do. Our version of the pragmatist argument is to start with the idea of a practice. The activity of philosophizing is one such practice. Considering philosophy as a situated practice, then, focuses immediate attention on how people do philosophy, and on the ways in which it is done by particular
people, under particular conditions of place and time, and in particular prototypical ways that are deemed proper by the norms of the practice itself.
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: