1st Edition

Education, Experience and Existence Engaging Dewey, Peirce and Heidegger

By John Quay Copyright 2013
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    Education, Experience and Existence proposes a new way of understanding education that delves beneath the conflict, confusion and compromise that characterize its long history. At the heart of this new understanding is what John Dewey strove to expound: a coherent theory of experience. Dewey’s reputation as a pragmatist is well known, but where experience is concerned pragmatism is only half the story. The other half is phenomenological, as crafted by Martin Heidegger. Encompassing both is Charles Sanders Peirce, whose philosophy draws pragmatism and phenomenology together in an embrace which enables a truly experiential philosophy to emerge.

    The book approaches the problem of confusion in education and philosophy by beginning with our most basic understandings of existence. Existence as an interaction is the starting point of modern science, and existence as individuality offers an aesthetic origin, attending to existence as a simple unity. In our contemporary world where scientific ways of thinking are privileged, the aesthetic whole is often overlooked, especially in education. Yet both are connected. A coherent theory of experience is therefore a marriage between phenomenology and pragmatism, enabling each to maintain its position by acknowledging how both are required.

    The book is divided into three main parts:

    - confusion in philosophy and education
    - a coherent theory of experience
    - a coherent theory of education.

    Quay suggests that education benefits from such a coherent theory of experience by better comprehending its connection to life. More than just knowing, more than just doing, education is about being. This book will be of interest to philosophers, educators and educational philosophers.

    Part I: Confusion in Philosophy and Education  Education, Philosophy and Existence  Part II: A Coherent Theory of Experience  Reflective Experience and the Logical Difference.  The Challenge of Non-reflective (Aesthetic) Experience.  The Ontological Difference.  The Way of Phenomenology.  Heidegger's Questioning of Be-ing  Part III: A Coherent Theory of Education  Four Causes of Educational Confusion.  Educating Through Occupations as Ways of Be-ing.

    Biography

    John Quay is Senior Lecturer at the Graduate School of Education, University of Melbourne, Australia.