Dewey, Heidegger, and the Future of Education: Beyondness and Becoming

Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

Drawing on insights into the philosophies of Dewey and Heidegger, this book moves forward the greater philosophical discourse surrounding education. It illuminates deep affinities between the corresponding traditions of Dewey and Heidegger, broadly labeled hermeneutics and pragmatism, and in doing so reveals the potential of the Dewey-Heidegger comparison for the future of education. To accomplish this task, Vasco d’Agnese explores the Deweyan and Heideggerian understanding of existence and experience. Both thinkers believed that humans are vulnerable from the very beginning, delivered to an uncanny and uncertain condition. On the other hand, such an uncanniness and dependency, rather than flowing in nihilistic defeat of educational purposes, puts radical responsibility on the side of the subject. It is, then, educationally promising. The book explains that for both Dewey and Heidegger, being a subject means being-with-others while transcending and advancing one’s boundaries, thus challenging the managerial framework of education that currently dominates educational institutions throughout the world.

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Chapters

Creative Questioning, Being-With and Transcending in Heidegger

In this chapter, d’Agnese analyses three features of Heidegger’s thought: creative questioning, being-with and transcending. The Chapter draws attention to the Heideggerian analysis of existence and Dasein’s constitution, arguing that existence and selfhood must be understood as always-already trans... see more

Imagination, Art, and Radical Possibility in Dewey

In this chapter, d’Agnese focuses on three aspects of Deweyan thought, namely imagination, art, and radical possibility. Specifically, d’Agnese argues that a comprehension of how imagination, aesthetic experience, and possibility work is essential to the understanding of both the Deweyan oeuvre and ... see more

Heideggerian Philosophy as an Educational Endeavor

In this chapter, by drawing on Heidegger’s oeuvre, d’Agnese presents what we may refer to as the thorough educational nature of Heideggerian reflection. More specifically, d’Agnese contends that Heideggerian thought is not only anchored by questions and features that are quintessentially pedagogical... see more

The Essential Uncertainty of Thinking: Subject and Education in John Dewey

In this chapter, d’Agnese analyzes the questions of thinking and subject in Dewey’s oeuvre and discusses the educational consequences that follow from such an analysis. Specifically, d’Agnese argues that Dewey revealed a radical uncertainty at the core of human thinking while dismantling the underst... see more

Challenging Plato’s Theoretical Gaze: Undergoing and Ineffable

In this chapter, d’Agnese analyzes the significance of the debunking of Western metaphysics by both Dewey and Heidegger. For Dewey, as well as for Heidegger, we are always-already vulnerable and exposed, thrown into an uncertain, unstable and perilous world. Such vulnerability and uncertainty affect... see more

Interweaving Dewey and Heidegger: Theoretical Background and Educational Bearings

In this chapter d’Agnese furnishes the theoretical framework and the critical background underlying the Dewey-Heidegger comparison, and he discusses the educational bearings of such a comparison. In this discussion, d’Agnese argues that the Dewey-Heidegger intersection may offer a foothold for a dif... see more

Introduction

In the chapter, d’Agnese presents the book’s overall framework and its aims and purposes. Dewey and Heidegger, of course, are central. However, d’Agnese’s attempt is not an analysis of Dewey and Heidegger per se. The book responds to the challenge of creating an alternative educational space than th... see more

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