The Thinking University: A Philosophical Examination of Thought and Higher Education

Springer Verlag (2018)
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Abstract

This book reinvigorates the philosophical treatment of the nature, purpose, and meaning of thought in today’s universities. The wider discussion about higher education has moved from a philosophical discourse to a discourse on social welfare and service, economics, and political agendas. This book reconnects philosophy with the central academic concepts of thought, reason, and critique and their associated academic practices of thinking and reasoning. Thought in this context should not be considered as a merely mental or cognitive construction, still less a cloistered college, but a fully developed individual and social engagement of critical reflection and discussion with the current pressing disciplinary, political, and philosophical issues. The editors hold that the element of thought, and the ability to think in a deep and groundbreaking way is, still, the essence of the university. But what does it mean to think in the university today? And in what ways is thought related not only to the epistemological and ontological issues of philosophical debate, but also to the social and political dimensions of our globalised age? In many countries, the state is imposing limitations on universities, dismissing or threatening academics who speak out critically. With this volume, the editors ask questions such as: What is the value of thought? What is the university’s proper relationship to thought? To give the notion of thought a thorough philosophical treatment, the book is divided into in three parts. The focus moves from an epistemological perspective in Part I, to a focus on existence and values in higher education in Part II, and then to a societal-oriented focus on the university in Part III. All three parts, in their own ways, debate the notion of thought in higher education and the university as a thinking form of being.

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Chapters

The Thinking University: Two Versions, Rival and Complementary

The thinking university is evident in two forms: thinking about the world, as structured in the disciplines and thinking about the university itself as an institution where, for example, a university attempts to steer some kind of direction for itself. Clearly, these two forms of thinking in the uni... see more

The Worldhood University: Design Signatures & Guild Thinking

Universities and higher education today are sites for entanglement of multiple forms of agency and lifeworlds. Enhanced focus is given to higher education strategies and frameworks that integrate more traditional forms of higher education curriculum with moral and political awareness, social agency,... see more

When Thought Gets Left Alone: Thinking, Recognition and Social Justice

In this chapter I use the work of third generation critical theorist, Axel Honneth, to explore the intimate interconnection between thought and social justice. The isolation and rarefication of thought is, I suggest, a social justice matter because it impinges on the relationships we can forge and s... see more

A Complexity Thinking Take on Thinking in the University

Universities are explicitly sites of thinking: they present myriad ways to think – and to provoke thinking. We address thinking relationally, that is, by doing it under provocation – it is in the doing of thinking that our learning emerges. In this chapter, we develop the significance of this ‘learn... see more

Technicising Thought: English and the Internationalisation of the University

Salient features of the university today indicate a lack of thinking. The paper seeks to understand this in the light of the proximity of thought to language. Reflection on the plurality of language leads to questions concerning the interrelations between thinking, language, and belonging, and these... see more

Bildung, Emotion and Thought

This chapter treats the emotional aspects of the university. In its first part, it focuses on the fact that we academics have paid insufficient attention to these aspects in our atempts to systematic reflection over the institution we inhabit. This inadequacy has negatively affected both our own sel... see more

Citizenship and the Thinking University: Toward the Citizen Scholar

The present chapter considers what constitutes a thinking university of the future. We argue that universities as centres of thought need to consider the relationship between knowledge and citizenship. How knowledge is produced and transmitted matters as this is truly what is transformational to bot... see more

Research Education and Care: The Care-Full PhD

University researchers face numerous challenges, including to expertise, the reproducibility of knowledge and the effects of performativity measures . In the research training context, there is a widely held view that PhD training is overly narrow and theoretical in scope leaving graduates poorly eq... see more

Towards an African University of Critique

The most recent spate of student protests in South Africa has not only unleashed unprecedented scenes of violence and intimidation among students and university authorities, but has brought into stark focus an urgent need for spaces of critique and deliberation. In this chapter, we reflect on the te... see more

Dissident Thought: A Decolonising Framework for Revolt in the University

True dissidence, Kristeva suggests, remains what it always has been: thought. And furthermore, such thought is a critical form of inner revolt. In this chapter we conceptualise thought as a decolonising framework drawing on the notions of exile, dissidence and delirium to argue for critical encounte... see more

Universities as Societal Drivers: Entrepreneurial Interventions for a Better Future

This paper argues for a novel view of the entrepreneurial and asks, can faculty and universities play a role in reshaping neoliberalism? In the last ten years there has been a significant literature talking about the impact of neoliberalism and its accountability regime on faculty and universities. ... see more

Truth, Democracy and the Mission of the University

Modern liberal democracies invest great hopes and resources under the heading of “higher education”: along with their role as motors of national economic growth, employability and technical innovation, universities are expected to inculcate and promote equality, tolerance, social and environmental a... see more

Introduction: Considering the Thinking University

The university is a thinking institution. Surely, that does not need to be said but it does. In much of the contemporary world, in many kinds of nation, the university finds itself amid a climate of suspicion, a climate in which the very heart of the university, namely its interests in knowledge and... see more

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Ronald Barnett
University College London

Citations of this work

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