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Introduction

Introduction . Defining/Explaining philosophy. Not easy! In one way or another, it ends up touching upon nearly every aspect of human life. Philosophy addresses science, art, religion, politics, medicine and education. That is why a basic grounding is important. What is philosophy?.

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Introduction

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  1. Introduction

  2. Defining/Explaining philosophy • Not easy! • In one way or another, it ends up touching upon nearly every aspect of human life. • Philosophy addresses science, art, religion, politics, medicine and education. • That is why a basic grounding is important

  3. What is philosophy? • The study of general and fundamental problems concerning matters such as existence, • knowledge, • truth, • beauty, • law, • justice, • validity, • mind and • language • (Teichmann & Evans, 1999).

  4. As an approach… • Philosophy addresses these questions/ideas through a systematic approach and reliance on reasoned argument. • It is rationally thinking about the general nature of the world • Metaphysics (theory of existence) • Justification of belief • Epistemology or theory of knowledge • Conduct of life or ethics (Qunton, 1995)

  5. Everyone has some general conception of the nature of the world in which they live and their place in it – metaphysics replaces the un-argued assumptions with a rational body of beliefs about the world as a whole. • Everyone has sometimes doubted/questioned their beliefs (of those of others) without any theory of what they are doing. Epistemology seeks by argument to make explicit the rules of correct belief formation. • Everyone governs their conduct toward a personal valued end – Ethics seeks to articulate that in a relationally systematic form.

  6. Philosophy focuses on abstract questions • Does God exist? • Is the world really as it appears to us? • How should we live? • What is art? • Do we have genuine freedom of choice? • What is the mind?

  7. Philosophy is the construction • Criticism • And analysis of arguments

  8. Why should teachers care about philosophy? • Academic pursuit, never amounting to anything of practical value. • Didn’t the ancient Greek philosophers ask the same questions which modern philosophers ask today? • Doesn’t’ this mean that philosophy never gets anywhere and never accomplishes anything?

  9. Philosophy is • A. A doctrine – a belief or system of beliefs accepted as authoritative by group/school • B. The rational investigation of questions about existence and knowledge and ethics • C. Any personal belief about how to live or how to deal with a station • D. An academic discipline that is divided in 5 major branches: • Logic, metaphysics; epistemology, ethics, aesthetics

  10. A philosophy is a system of beliefs about reality. • An integrated view of the world • It is the foundation of knowledge. • It is the necessary product of man’s rational mind. • For instance, to gain knowledge of an objects, man must recognize that objects have identity; recognize that conclusions are possible because the world does exist; and exists in a particular way.

  11. A Framework • Philosophy provides the framework for which man can understand the world. • Provides the premises by which man can discover truth • Every person has an understanding of the world. • Every person must have a philosophy, even if it is never made explicit.

  12. Hierarchical relationship between branches • Root is metaphysics – the study of existence and the nature of existence • Epistemology – study of knowledge and how we know about reality and existence • Ethics – study of how man should act (dependent on epistemology because it is impossible to make choices without knowledge. • Aesthetics – study of art and since of life depends on all of the above

  13. What is the meaning of education and philosophy of education? • Enlighten the understanding – to give light to, to give clearer views, to illuminate, to instruct, to enable to see or comprehend truth, to enlighten the mind. • To instill good character, behavior, communication skills • Form good habits, encourage good work habits, industriousness, truthfulness, honest, responsibility, patience, resourcefulness, gentleness, and carefulness. • Train for future roles

  14. Education is the knowledge of putting one’s potentials to maximum use. • Assists in decision making • Enables us to receive information from the external work, acquaint with past history, receive all necessary information regard the present. • Without education, man is as though in a closed room – education provides the windows.

  15. Philosophy of Education • The study of education and its problems. • The application of philosophical methods to the theory and practice of education. • Nature of learning • Purpose of education • Goal of education (imparting knowledge, developing intellectual independence, instilling moral or political values) • What is educational authority What is the relationship between education and society? • Plato, Rousseau, Dewey

  16. Educational philosophy deals with • How children should be educated • What they should be educated in • What the ultimate purpose of education should be for a society • How to be an effective teacher • Curriculum • Administration • Aims and goals of education

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