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  1. Foucauldian critical thinking: An antithesis to technicization.Yulong Li & Xiaojing Liu - forthcoming - Journal of Philosophy of Education.
    Challenging the way critical thinking is often considered a skill, this article explores possible discursive reasons for the skill-orientation and technicization of this concept. First, using Michel Foucault’s ‘division and rejection’ theory as a discursive analytical lens, the discussion explores the neoliberal alliance of international organizations, national governmental authorities, the media, job markets, schools, and concerned parents. It explores how this alliance promotes the discourse of skill and competence, and prepares the ground for critical thinking’s technicization. Drawing further on Foucault’s (...)
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  • Education after the end of the world. How can education be viewed as a hyperobject?Nick Peim & Nicholas Stock - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (3):251-262.
    This article considers a series of ideas disturbing the conventional wisdom that decrees education an essential force in saving the world. Taking Morton's descriptions of hyperobjects seriously, we consider his radical idea that the world has ended amidst the eco-political depredations of the Anthropocene. Accordingly, we claim that education in modernity most properly belongs - materially and ideologically - with technological enframing and the rise of biopower. In other words, what is taken almost universally as the sacred realm of education (...)
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  • Is (It) Time to Leave Eternity Behind? Rethinking Bildung's Implicit Temporality.Kjetil Horn Hogstad - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (4-5):589-605.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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