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  1. Openness, newness and radical possibility in Deweyan work: a response to Jasinski.Vasco D’Agnese - 2018 - Ethics and Education 13 (2):234-250.
    In his article Potentialism and the experience of the new, Jasinski argues for the use of a potentialist approach in education by relating it to a line of thought that starts with Dewey and is fulfilled by Agamben and Lewis. Although the reading that Jasinski offers on potentialism is interesting, his understanding of Dewey is problematic. In this paper, I argue that much of what Jasinski claims as worthy of pursuit in education is already contained in the Deweyan questions of (...)
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  • Putting philosophy to the service of schools to give children’s voices real value.Sonia París Albert - 2018 - Childhood and Philosophy 14 (30):453-470.
    This article explores a modern approach to childhood that abandons the traditional view of children in western societies as inferior, fragile and vulnerable. The modern approach explored in this paper takes a plural perspective in the conception of children as people who are able to think for themselves and who have the absolute right to participate in the affairs that affect them. This modern approach is related in this study to the free-rangers thesis, in which childhood is interpreted as a (...)
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  • A Global Dialogue on Learning and Studying.Weili Zhao, Derek R. Ford & Tyson E. Lewis - 2020 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (3):239-244.
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  • Solitude and Self‐Realisation in Education.Julian Stern & Małgorzata Wałejko - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (1):107-123.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  • Feats of Strength for Weak Utopianism: Giorgio Agamben, Educational Potentiality and the Studious Spatiality of the Active Learning Classroom.Michael P. A. Murphy - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (1):204-214.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 55, Issue 1, Page 204-214, February 2021.
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  • ‘Trust me, I do not know what I am talking about!’: The voice of the teacher beyond the oath and blasphemy.Igor Jasinski & Tyson E. Lewis - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (1):47-57.
    Educational theorists ranging from Ivan Illich to Jan Masschelein and Maarten Simons have described institutionalized schooling as a modernized, secular church, full of rituals, sacraments, and various incantations. For them, the function of the teacher as priest and schooling as baptism is highly problematic, separating education from the common world. As such, the educational theology of the school needs to be suspended in order for educational life to take on new meaning beyond the sacraments of learning. To further this line (...)
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  • By way of infancy, an exercise in translation.Morgan Deumier - 2022 - Ethics and Education 17 (4):437-449.
    ABSTRACT This paper invites us to reconsider our usual understanding of infancy, no longer as something that passes but as infantia. The Latin word infantia, which is not easy to translate, means a lack of speech, a lack of eloquence, and also infancy, babyhood, and dumbness. Drawing on Barbara Cassin’s works on the untranslatables, I propose to translate infantia, starting by not-understanding, and then by taking detours by different texts, in-between languages. Exercising translation allows us to expose ourselves to the (...)
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