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  1. On Human Conduct.David Copp - 1977 - Philosophical Review 86 (2):235.
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  • Education and the Voice of Michael Oakeshott.Kevin Williams - 2007 - Imprint Academic.
    The work of Michael Oakeshott has retained a striking currency in philosophical discourse about education. This is hardly surprising in view of his influence on Paul Hirst and Richard Peters, two philosophers whose work had an enormous impact on educational thinking and practice in the English-speaking world. And, although much of the detail in educational debate may change, the fundamental underlying concerns regarding the conception of the person, the nature of knowledge and the moral life and their expression in educational (...)
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  • Lessons from a master: Montaigne’s pedagogy of conversation.Kevin Williams & Patrick Williams - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (3):253-263.
    There remains much to be learned from searching exploration of the great authors who have meditated on education. Montaigne is one such thinker and this essay endeavors to draw together the strands of his pedagogy and to demonstrate how they gain purchase in the business of teaching and learning. The article also proposes to supplement his vision with practical examples from fiction and autobiography. Perhaps the most striking theme is the need to be able to decentre from the comfort zone (...)
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  • Education and Conversation: Exploring Oakeshott's Legacy.Kevin Williams - 2017 - Educational Theory 67 (3):327-335.
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  • On Human Conduct.Michael Oakeshott - 1991 - Clarendon Press.
    On Human Conduct is composed of three connected essays. Each has its own concern: the first with theoretical understanding, and with human conduct in general; the second with an ideal mode of human relationship which the author has called civil association; and the third with that ambiguous, historic association commonly called a modern European state. Running through the work is Professor Oakshott's belief in philosophical reflection as an adventure: the adventure of one who seeks to understand in other terms what (...)
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  • Education: The engagement and its frustration.Michael Oakeshott - 1971 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 5 (1):43–76.
    Michael Oakeshott; Education: The Engagement and its Frustration, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 5, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 43–76, https://doi.o.
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  • Education: The Engagement and its Frustration.Michael Oakeshott - 1971 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 5 (1):43-76.
    Michael Oakeshott; Education: The Engagement and its Frustration, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 5, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 43–76, https://doi.o.
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  • A Place of Learning.Michael Oakeshott - 1982 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 3 (3-4):65-75.
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  • Utopianism, transindividuation, and foreign language education in the Japanese university.David Kennedy - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (3):275-285.
    This article examines the current state of foreign language education in Japanese universities as illustrative of the troubling conditions facing the liberal arts in a globalized neoliberal milieu. The utopian ideal in education has always insinuated, at the least, a pedagogy that inspires personal agency, creative investment, challenge to power and social change. This imagining of incalculable futures, however, has been undermined by the seemingly inevitable and confluent forces of a networked world, represented most forcefully by the socioeconomic reductionism of (...)
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  • Fiction and learning realities after postmodernism.Viktor Johansson - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1504-1505.
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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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  • Among Schoolchildren a Lecture Dedicated to the Memory of John Malone.Seamus Heaney - 1983 - John Malone Memorial Committee.
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  • Michael Oakeshott on Religion, Aesthetics, and Politics.Elizabeth Campbell Corey - 2006 - University of Missouri.
    For much of his career, British political philosopher Michael Oakeshott was identified with Margaret Thatcher’s conservative policies. He has been called by some a guru to the Tories, while others have considered him one of the last proponents of British Idealism. Best known for such books as _Experience and Its Modes_ and _Rationalism in Politics_, Oakeshott has been the subject of numerous studies, but always with an emphasis on his political thought. Elizabeth Campbell Corey now makes the case that Oakeshott’s (...)
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  • On Human Conduct.Michael Oakeshott - 1977 - Mind 86 (343):453-456.
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