Enhancing Humanity: The Philosophical Foundations of Humanistic Education

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Springer, 2007 M10 1 - 230 páginas
In Jean PaulSartre's Nausea, Roquentin feels bound to listen to the sentimental ramblings about humanism and humanity by the Self Taught Man. "Is it my fault," muses Roquentin, "in all he tells me, I recognize the lack of the genuine article? Is it my fault if, as he speaks, I see all the humanists I have known rise up? I have known so many ofthem!" And then he lists the radical humanist, the so called"left" humanist, and Communist Humanist, the Catholic humanist, all claiming a passion for their fellow men. "But there are others, a swarm of others: the humanist philosopher who bends over his brothers like a wise older brother with a sense of his responsibility; the humanist who loves men as they are, the humanist who loves men as they ought to be, the one who wants to save them with their consent, and the one who will save them in spite of themselves. . . . " Quite naturally, the skeptical Roquentin ends by saying how "they all hate each other: as individuals, not as men. " Fully aware of the misuse and false comfort in the use of the term, Professor Aloni proceeds to restore meaning to the word as well as appropriate its educational significance. There is a freshness in this book, a restoration of a lost clarity, a regaining of authentic commitment.
 

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viii
20
The NaturalisticRomantic Approach and the Yearning
37
The CriticalRadical Approach and the Yearning
47
An Integrative and Normative Model
61
An Integrative and Normative
77
Quality of Culture Autonomous
85
Education Towards Humanistic Morality
119
Characteristics of a Value Crisis
132
The Methods and Limitations of Moral Humanistic
142
Pedagogical Means
162
Humanistic Education in the Test
173
Epilogue
215
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