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  1. The Rediscovery of Teaching: On robot vacuum cleaners, non-egological education and the limits of the hermeneutical world view.Gert Biesta - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (4):374-392.
    In this article, I seek to reclaim a place for teaching in face of the contemporary critique of so-called traditional teaching. While I agree with this critique to the extent to which it is levelled at an authoritarian conception of teaching as control, a conception in which the student can only exist as an object of the interventions of the teacher and never as a subject in its own right, I argue that the popular alternative to traditional teaching, that is (...)
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  • Relearning the Art of Paying Attention: A Conversation.Martin Savransky & Isabelle Stengers - 2018 - Substance 47 (1):130-145.
    The first question I wanted to ask you has to do with the manner in which you do philosophy, in the sense that the concepts that you create, develop and experiment with, always resist the temptation to tell others what to do. In fact, at the very beginning of your “The Cosmopolitical Proposal”, you begin with a question that I think resonates with this. You write: “How can we present a proposal intended not to say what is, or what ought (...)
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  • Aesthetic Concerns, Philosophical Fabulations: The Importance of a 'New Aesthetic Paradigm'.Melanie Sehgal - 2018 - Substance 47 (1):112-129.
    “Aesthetics” is not a concern that figures prominently in Isabelle Stengers’s work and it is not difficult to find the reasons why. Reading the discipline of aesthetics through a historical and systematic perspective derived from Stengers and Alfred North Whitehead, the invention of modern aesthetics as a philosophical discipline in the 18th century can be read as the flipside to “the invention of modern science” described by Stengers in her seminal book with just this title. Understood in this historical sense (...)
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  • (1 other version)Introductory Notes on an Ecology of Practices.Isabelle Stengers - 2005 - Cultural Studeis Review 11 (1):183-196.
    Prepared for an ANU Humanities Research Centre Symposium in early August 2003, these notes may be considered as a comment on Brian Massumi’s proposition that ‘a political ecology would be a social technology of belonging, assuming coexistence and co-becoming as the habitat of practices’.
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  • What is philosophy?(Slovak translation of an essay by Deleuze and Guattari).G. Deleuze & F. Guattari - 1994 - Filozofia 54 (1):41-47.
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  • Studying with a teacher: education beyond the logic of progress.Piotr Zamojski - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (6):1072-1086.
    The article presents a thought experiment aimed at indicating a possibility for thinking education beyond the logic of progress. In its first part, the argument reconstructs the entanglement of the modern idea of progress (as found in Francis Bacon and Comenius) and education, while tracking down the specific coupling of obedience and conquest at work. Through such an analysis a link between the ideas of progress and of emancipation is determined, which leads to the acknowledgement of the difficulty of the (...)
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  • Studying in the Superdiverse City: System_D and the Challenge of Solidarity in Brussels.Hans Schildermans, Joke Vandenabeele, Joris Vlieghe & Piotr Zamojski - 2020 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (3):257-268.
    In recent years, the relation between studying and learning has been a topic of debate. This article is mainly interested in a concept of study practices, conceived of as practices that are strongly engaged with issues of living together in a superdiverse city. Such practices firstly require to think the relation between studying and learning in other-than-oppositional terms, and secondly, to raise questions concerning the political role of education. The aim of the article is double in that it wants to (...)
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  • Education in times of fast learning: the future of the school.Jan Masschelein & Maarten Simons - 2015 - Ethics and Education 10 (1):84-95.
    Against the background of the many attacks on the school as being outdated, alienating, ineffective and reproducing inequalities we offer a morphological understanding of the school as distinguished from functionalist understandings and idealistic understandings. Our educational morphology approaches the school as a particular scholastic ‘form of gathering’ i.e. a particular time–space–matter arrangement that deals in a specific way with the new generation, allows for a particular relation to the world, and for a particular experience of potentiality and of commonality. We (...)
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  • Deleuze and Guattari's last enigmatic message.Isabelle Stengers - 2005 - Angelaki 10 (2):151 – 167.
    (2005). Deleuze and Guattari's Last Enigmatic Message. Angelaki: Vol. 10, continental philosophy and the sciences the french tradition issue editor: andrew aitken, pp. 151-167.
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  • The adventure of study: thinking with artifices in a Palestinian experimental university.Hans Schildermans, Maarten Simons & Jan Masschelein - 2019 - Ethics and Education 14 (2):184-197.
    ABSTRACTThe question concerning the relation between thinking and the university is the starting point of this paper. After a very brief outline of some reflections on this topic, the case of Campus in Camps, a Palestinian experimental university, is presented to shed light on this issue. Inspired by Isabelle Stengers’ ecology of practices, it is possible to discern four requirements on thinking in the work of Campus in Camps, namely storytelling, comparing, mapping, and using. It will be argued that the (...)
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  • The Humor of the Problematic: Thinking with Stengers.Martin Savransky - 2018 - Substance 47 (1):29-46.
    In the chapter of Gilles Deleuze’s The Fold: Leibniz and The Baroque where Whitehead makes a surprising and crucial appearance, Deleuze chooses to introduce the English mathematician and philosopher as the successor, or “diadoche,” of what he describes as a somewhat secret school. The reason for the secrecy of this school is itself something of a mystery. Even when Deleuze alludes to the question “What is an Event?” as a thread weaving its members together, it cannot be a coincidence that (...)
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  • (2 other versions)Logic: The Theory of Inquiry.John Dewey - 1938 - Philosophy 14 (55):370-371.
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  • On Problematic Situations and Problematizations: Study Practices and the Pragmatics of a World to‐Be‐Made.Hans Schildermans - 2022 - Educational Theory 72 (4):455-471.
    In this article, Hans Schildermans suggests practices of study as a way for universities to respond to socio-ecological questions, issues, and problems related to the Anthropocene. He elaborates the concept of study practices by drawing on traditional pragmatic notions, such as problematic situation and problematization, as these are articulated in John Dewey's theory of inquiry. Prompted by concerns about the closed problem–solution nexus, as well as questions concerning the (egological) worldview underlying this theory, Schildermans aims to reread these ideas through (...)
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  • Kinopedagogy as non-conservative education and time as the abode of humans.Stefano Oliverio - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (6):1103-1118.
    In this paper, the endeavour to understand how to think of education ‘after progress’, viz. in an age in which progress has become problematic, is undertaken by focusing on the theme of time. Dovetailing Klaus Mollenhauer’s reflections on the rise of the Bildungszeit at the dawn of modernity with Thomas Popkewitz’s analyses of ‘cosmopolitan time’ presiding over pedagogical reform from the 19th century to the present, I shall, first, explore this temporal configuration of modern schooling (which goes hand in hand (...)
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  • Reading Kant as a radical empiricist: or how to find an orientation for education after progress.Joris Vlieghe - 2023 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (6):1059-1071.
    This article deals with the educational challenge of responding to the pending ecological crisis (and many other future apocalyptic scenarios that haunt our imagination). It seems we are living in a time when we have given up on the idea that progress is possible or desirable, and this questions education at its roots. In order to find a proper educational response that befits our time, it is requested that we gain a new sense of orientation (which is no longer aimed (...)
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  • Introduction: Isabelle Stengers and the Dramatization of Philosophy.Martin Savransky - 2018 - Substance 47 (1):3-16.
    In what may seem like an uncharacteristic passage by someone who otherwise described himself as the typical example of the Victorian Englishman, Alfred North Whitehead once wrote that “[t]he notion of pure thought in abstraction from all expression is a figment of the learned world. A thought is a tremendous form of excitement”. It is the patterned signature of its expression that not only gives thought its own distinct character, but also propels it out into the world, exciting its environment (...)
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