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  1. Future Priorities of the Humanities in Europe: What Have the Humanities to Offer?: Report of a round table conference held to draft a manifesto for the European Commissioner and working papers for the EC Working Party on Future Priorities for Humanities Research.Jan Parker - 2007 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 6 (1):123-127.
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  • The Utility of the Arts and Humanities.Michael BÈrubÈ - 2003 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 2 (1):23-40.
    Artists and humanists who work in universities are generally ambivalent about the idea of defending their enterprises in terms of social utility: on the one hand they do not want to claim that the Arts and Humanities are such exalted and selfjustifying endeavors that no one need bother explainingwhy such things are worth pursuing, yet on the other hand they are rightly skeptical that cost-benefit analyses of academic labor will do justice to disciplines devoted to the varieties of human cultural (...)
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  • Education for Citizenship in an Era of Global Connection.Martha Nussbaum - 2002 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 21 (4/5):289-303.
    Higher education makes an importantcontribution to citizenship. In the UnitedStates, the required portion of the ``liberalarts education'' in colleges and universitiescan be reformed so as to equip students for thechallenges of global citizenship. The paperadvocates focusing on three abilities: theSocratic ability to critize one's owntraditions and to carry on an argument on termsof mutual respect for reason; (2) the abilityto think as a citizen of the whole world, notjust some local region or group; and (3) the``narrative imagination,'' the ability to (...)
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  • ‘ Making A World That Is Worth Living In’: Humanities Teaching And The Formation Of Practical Reasoning.Melanie Walker - 2009 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 8 (3):231-246.
    This article considers humanities teaching as a vital space where students might develop their capability as ‘practical reasoners’. The importance of this for self-development, but also for society and democratic life, is considered, while the economic purposes which currently dominate higher education are critiqued. An example is taken from the teaching of history to show how lecturers teach and students learn secular intellectual practices under pedagogical arrangements of communicative reasoning and ontological becoming.
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  • The Humanities and the Recovery of the Real World.Jonathan Jacobs - 2009 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 8 (1):26-40.
    This article identifies a common intellectual project of the disciplines that constitute the Humanities. It does not define the humanities but characterizes some of the main features of the distinctive and essential kind of learning uniquely attainable by their study. The humanities enable us to attain an understanding of normativity in the broadest sense; humanistic study leads to a textured, penetrating comprehension of diverse valuative matters and concerns. Moreover, study in the humanities enables us to recognize and appreciate valuative realism (...)
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