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  1. Learned ignorance: Opposing the scientificising hegemony through Santos, Pope and Hamilton.Ralph Jessop - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (2):409-421.
    A major strand of opposition to the West's/Global North's scientificising hegemony has recently been retrieved through Santos’ reinterpretation of Cusanus’ 15th-century doctrine of learned ignorance. Though Cusanus has been marginalised, his doctrine imbues a profound epistemic humility conducive to our present need to reconfigure education. Contributing to this retrieval, I define learned ignorance as an epistemic principle of humility, adherence to which conduces towards reconditioning learning and teaching as non-finalised, processual activities within a genuinely intercultural pluriverse of knowledges. Agreeing with (...)
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  • Nice but not necessary? Reflections on the role of the arts in Kitcher's The Main Enterprise of the World.Alexis Gibbs - 2023 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (2):409-418.
    The manifesto presented in Philip Kitcher's exhaustive appraisal of contemporary American education—and the case for its potential reform—is so wide-ranging that it is not possible to do justice to its every component. Instead, I will speak to one of its parts in an attempt to recognize what I take to be the value of the whole. My aim is to address the section on the role of the arts in formal education, and the nature of aesthetic experience within that, to (...)
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  • Why is the Relationship Between Philosophy and Literature of Significance for the Philosophy of Education?Liam Gearon & Emma Williams - 2018 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 52 (4):579-591.
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