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El. knyga: Kant and Education: Interpretations and Commentary

Edited by (Tulane University, USA), Edited by (Stockholm University, Sweden)

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Immanuel Kant’s moral philosophy, political philosophy, and philosophy of judgement have been and continue to be widely discussed among many scholars. The impact of his thinking is beyond doubt and his ideas continue to inspire and encourage an on-going dialogue among many people in our world today. Given the historical and philosophical significance of Kant’s moral, political, and aesthetic theory, and the connection he draws between these theories and the appropriate function and methodology of education, it is surprising that relatively little has been written on Kant’s contribution to education theory.

Recently, however, internationally recognized Kant scholars such as Paul Guyer, Manfred Kuehn, Richard Velkley, Robert Louden, Susan Shell, and others have begun to turn their attention to Kant’s writings on education and the role of education in cultivating moral character. Kant and Education: Interpretations and Commentary has gathered these scholars together with the aim of filling this perceived void in Kant scholarship. All of the essays contained within this volume will examine either Kant’s ideas on education through an historical analysis of his texts; or the importance and relevance of his moral philosophy, political philosophy, and/or aesthetics in contemporary education theory (or some combination).

Introduction: The Highest Good-the Moral Endeavor of Education ix
Klas Roth
Chris W. Surprenant
1 Kant's Contribution to Moral Education
1(11)
Chris W. Surprenant
2 Kant and Rousseau on Moral Education
12(14)
Joseph R. Reisert
3 Rousseau, Kant, and the Pedagogy of Deception
26(13)
Phillip Scuderi
4 "Not a Slow Reform, but a Swift Revolution": Kant and Basedow on the Need to Transform Education
39(16)
Robert B. Louden
5 Kant on Education, Anthropology, and Ethics
55(14)
Manfred Kuehn
6 Educating through Perplexity: Kant and the German Enlightenment
69(12)
Richard Velkley
7 Bringing Morality to Appearances: Kant's Theory of Education
81(13)
Gary B. Herbert
8 Culture and Paradox in Kant's Philosophy of Education
94(13)
Jorgen Huggler
9 Kant's Invitation to Educational Thinking
107(17)
Lars Lovlie
10 Examples of Moral Possibility
124(15)
Paul Guyer
11 Moral Education and the Ideal of Humanity
139(13)
Richard Dean
12 Enabling the Realization of Humanity: The Anthropological Dimension of Education
152(11)
Alix Cohen
13 From Discipline to Autonomy: Kant's Theory of Moral Development
163(14)
Paul Formosa
14 Kant as Moral Psychologist?
177(16)
James Scott Johnston
15 Kant on the Humanities
193(21)
Susan Meld Shell
16 Freedom and Autonomy in Knowledge-Based Societies
214(13)
Klas Roth
Contributors 227(4)
Index 231
Klas Roth is Professor in the Department of Education at Stockholm University, Sweden. His articles, covering topics in philosophy of education, cosmopolitanism and education, and Kants practical philosophy, have appeared in a variety of journals including Educational Theory, Educational Philosophy and Theory, Studies in Philosophy and Education, Journal of Philosophy of Education, and Philosophy & Social Criticism.









Chris W. Surprenant is a Visiting Assistant Professor in Philosophy at Tulane University. His articles, covering topics in moral philosophy, political philosophy, and educational philosophy, have appeared in a variety of journals including Kantian Review, History of Philosophy Quarterly, and The Journal of Social Philosophy.