Contrasting Arguments presents the variable story of the culture wars and the clash in education from the point of view of the principal actors on the two sides. This makes it a very different story from the one told by their disciples and followers in the schools of education. According to the main actors, the root of the contemporary culture clash goes back to the Enlightenment and beyond to the historical Socrates and the platonic dialogues. However, there are much deeper issues that exist on a more fundamental level: (1) subject-object distinction deriving from Hegel, (2) the nature of…mehr
Contrasting Arguments presents the variable story of the culture wars and the clash in education from the point of view of the principal actors on the two sides. This makes it a very different story from the one told by their disciples and followers in the schools of education. According to the main actors, the root of the contemporary culture clash goes back to the Enlightenment and beyond to the historical Socrates and the platonic dialogues. However, there are much deeper issues that exist on a more fundamental level: (1) subject-object distinction deriving from Hegel, (2) the nature of human consciousness either as perception or as experience, (3) rejection of consciousness as an entirety and its acceptance by the other side from Gramsci and Freire, (4) the consequent development of a theory of instruction and craft of teaching, and (5) the phenomenon of "inversion" as an explanation of the moral force of the evangelical coming from the left. Each issue is discussed in a chapter devoted to the theme in question, with an appropriate title to guide the reader. This book closes by contrasting the best theories to help readers make their choices and cut through the culture clash. Contrasting Arguments is a must read for students of Gramsci, Freire, Socrates, Plato, Hegel, Dewey, Bruner and beyond who are interested in how these great minds clash in our global education efforts.
Oscar Pemantle studied political science at Minnesota, Yale, and Berkeley with Mulford Sibley, Willmoore Kendall, and Sheldon Wolin, respectively. Students remember him as a "Magic Teacher" in his three years on the faculty of the University of California, Berkeley (Dept. of Rhetoric) and three more years in its adult Extension. Losing his eyesight, he could not finish his dissertation, Man and Movement: The Natural History of an Idea, despite encouragement and support from Sir Isaiah Berlin and E. H. Carr. He turned from textual analysis to the education of children, founding and for twenty years directing the very creative and thriving Black Pine Circle Day School in Berkeley, which he based on Socratic teaching. Pemantle went on to develop Socratic teacher training programs in California and Mexico. He is the founder and director of The Institute for Active Learning. He recently completed the first of a two-volume study, Who Killed Education?
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction - The Transformation of Antonio Gramsci: A Study in Retrieval - "The Magic of Marxism": Paulo Freire Pro and Contra - The Two Codes: Origins and Meaning of the Culture War in Education - The Traditional Mistake of the Traditional Educator - How Myths Are Made: The Mythic Power of Marxism - Truths, Half Truths, and One and a Half Truths: From Diane Ravitch to Sheldon S. Wolin - Bertrand Russell and the Eureka Syndrome: Kekule's Dream - Where Ends Collide: The Liberal-Conservative Debate in Philosophy - The Conservative Critique - Closing Comments - Final Remarks - Conclusion: The Argument in Model Form.
Introduction - The Transformation of Antonio Gramsci: A Study in Retrieval - "The Magic of Marxism": Paulo Freire Pro and Contra - The Two Codes: Origins and Meaning of the Culture War in Education - The Traditional Mistake of the Traditional Educator - How Myths Are Made: The Mythic Power of Marxism - Truths, Half Truths, and One and a Half Truths: From Diane Ravitch to Sheldon S. Wolin - Bertrand Russell and the Eureka Syndrome: Kekule's Dream - Where Ends Collide: The Liberal-Conservative Debate in Philosophy - The Conservative Critique - Closing Comments - Final Remarks - Conclusion: The Argument in Model Form.
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