1st Edition

Nietzsche, Culture and Education

Edited By Thomas E. Hart Copyright 2009
    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the spring of 1872 Friedrich Nietzsche gave a series of public lectures titled 'On the Future of our Educational Institution' to an audience in Basel, Switzerland. In the lectures he made clear his attitude about what was wrong with education and how it had negatively affected the culture of his day. More than one hundred years after the death of Nietzsche, his legacy remains one of the most pervasive in philosophical thought. While his influence on philosophical thought concerning culture is everywhere to be found, his influence on the philosophy of education has yet to find a place in mainstream thought on the subject, in spite of the inextricable connection between the two. This collection has been put together in an effort to redress this situation. Nietzsche, Culture and Education brings together a collection of specially commissioned essays on the theme of Nietzsche's cultural critique and its use in and effect on educational theory. The international character of the contributors gives this work a polyvalent perspective on these areas of Nietzsche's philosophy. This publication will be a valuable source book for both undergraduate and postgraduate students of philosophy, education and the social sciences as well as for Nietzsche specialists.

    Contents: Foreword; Introduction; Authenticity and higher education: the Nietzschean university in the 21st century, Richard Smith; Become the one you are: on commandments and praise - among friends, Babette E. Babich; Nietzsche's practice of solitude, Horst Hutter; Nietzschean ethics and authenticity: beyond the consensual and the subjective, Paul Smeyers; Nietzsche's radical retreat into solitude: cultural pessimism or self-diagnosis?, Ken Cussen; Measure and Bildung, Paul van Tongeren; A philosophy for education, Thomas E. Hart; Index.

    Biography

    Thomas E. Hart is based at, University College Utrecht, The Netherlands.

    ’... a distinguished collection of essays around a provocative theme.’ Metapsychology