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  1. Heidegger’s Reinscription of Paideia in the Context of Online Learning.John Roder & Christopher Naughton - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (9):949-957.
    One of the questions that Heidegger presents in his paper, ‘Plato’s Doctrine on Truth’, is the distortion as he sees it of paideia—that is the loss of the essential elements in education. This loss is characterised according to Heidegger, by a misconception of Plato’s concept of teaching and learning. By undertaking an historical examination, Heidegger provides a means to rectify this loss. With reference to past, present and future philosophical perspectives of teaching and learning as particular spaces, an attempt is (...)
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  • The internet, identity and intellectual capital: a response to Dreyfus’s critique of e-learning.James Petrik, Talgat Kilybayev & Dinara Shormanbayeva - 2014 - Ethics and Information Technology 16 (4):275-284.
    This paper defends the possibility that meaningful learning can be supported by the Internet. Responding to Hubert Dreyfus’s neo-Kierkegaardian contention that the Internet inhibits and does not support meaningful learning, we argue that it is a valuable tool for learning that can promote the development of intellectual expertise without the accompanying atrophy of personhood that Dreyfus believes is a prominent effect of extensive engagement with the Internet. Additionally, we argue that a conflation of practically ultimate commitments and epistemically ultimate commitments (...)
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  • Bodily Presence, Absence, and their Ethical Challenges.Golfo Maggini - 2013 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 17 (3):316-332.
    In this paper I deal with Hubert Dreyfus’s phenomenological ethics regarding information technologies and the use of the Internet. From the 1990s on, Dreyfus elaborates a multi-faceted model of ethical expertise which may find a paradigmatic field of application in the ways in which information technologies transform our sense of personal identity, as well as our view of ethical integrity and commitment. In his 2001 On the Internet, Dreyfus investigates further several of the ideas already present in his groundbreaking 1997 (...)
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