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  1.  23
    Inferentialism at Work: The Significance of Social Epistemology in Theorising Education.Hanno Su & Johannes Bellmann - 2018 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 52 (2):230-245.
    In connecting educational theory to a neo-pragmatist social epistemology, we set out to understand education as knowledge practices that yield ‘the cultural world again’ by retelling culture or by making explicit what is implicit in culture. Recent trends in German educational studies towards holistic understanding of education demonstrate that such a holistic, non-representationalist framework is deliberately placed outside the traditional procedure of merely applying knowledge gained in the so-called foundational disciplines such as philosophy, sociology or psychology to the field of (...)
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  2.  29
    Re-Interpretation in Historiography: John Dewey and the Neo-Humanist Tradition.Johannes Bellmann - 2004 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 23 (5):467-488.
    Did John Dewey’s ‘new philosophy of education’ really try to dissolve the whole block of tradition or is his debt namely to educational core-concepts of neo-humanism deeper than he was prepared to acknowledge? After some general remarks on the process of reception as productive re-adaptation and its implication for historiography I will deal with Dewey’s own contexts that shape the interpretative grid through which he receives the tradition. Two case studies attempt to illustrate both continuity and discontinuity with a specific (...)
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  3.  4
    John Deweys naturalistische Pädagogik: Argumentationskontexte, Traditionslinien.Johannes Bellmann - 2007 - Paderborn: Schöningh.