1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910265224003321

Autore

Bakhurst David

Titolo

The formation of reason [[electronic resource] /] / David Bakhurst

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Malden, MA, : Wiley-Blackwell, 2011

ISBN

1-4443-9532-7

1-4443-9560-2

1-299-31364-7

1-4443-9559-9

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (223 p.)

Collana

Journal of philosophy of education book series ; ; 12

Classificazione

PHI009000

Disciplina

128.33

Soggetti

Philosophy of mind

Knowledge, Theory of

Reason

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

""Series page""; ""Title page""; ""Copyright page""; ""Dedication""; ""Acknowledgements""; ""Foreword""; ""Author's Preface""; ""1 What Can Philosophy Tell Us About How History Made the Mind?""; ""What Role for Philosophy?""; ""Wittgenstein and Davidson""; ""Wittgenstein and Davidson Contrasted""; ""McDowell""; ""The Idea of Bildung""; ""Understanding the Bildungsprozess""; ""The Conceptual and the Practical""; ""Conclusion""; ""2 Social Constructionism""; ""Social Constructionism Introduced""; ""The Social Construction of Reality""; ""Why Bother About Global Constructionism?""

""Against Global Constructionism""""Matters Political""; ""The Social Construction of Mental States""; ""Why Mental States Are Not Socially Constructed""; ""The Social Construction of Psychological Categories""; ""Conclusion""; ""3 Self and Other""; ""Problems of Self and Other""; ""The Problem of Self and Other in One's Own Person""; ""Strawson on Persons""; ""Wiggins on Persons and Human Nature""; ""The Significance of Second Nature""; ""Further Positives""; ""Conclusion: Two Cautionary Notes""; ""4 Freedom, Reflection and the Sources of Normativity""; ""McDowell on Judgement""



""Owens's Critique""""Defending Intellectual Freedom""; ""Freedom and the Sources of Normativity""; ""Sources of Normativity I: Practical Reasoning""; ""Sources of Normativity II: Theoretical Reasoning""; ""A McDowellian Response""; ""Conclusion""; ""5 Exploring the Space of Reasons""; ""McDowell on the Space of Reasons""; ""Brandom's Inferentialism""; ""Ilyenkov on the Ideal""; ""Conclusion""; ""6 Reason and Its Limits: Music, Mood and Education""; ""An Initial Response""; ""The Challenge Reconfigured""; ""Passivity Within Spontaneity""; ""Mood""; ""Mood, Salience and Shape""; ""Music""

""Education""""Conclusion""; ""7 Education Makes Us What We Are""; ""A Residual Individualism""; ""Vygotsky's Legacy""; ""Reconciling Vygotsky and Mc Dowell""; ""Personalism""; ""Final Thoughts on Education""; ""References""; ""Index""

Sommario/riassunto

"In The Formation of Reason, David Bakhurst expounds and defends a socio-historical account of the human mind. Inspired by the work of the influential philosopher John McDowell, Bakhurst maintains that the distinctive character of human psychological powers resides in our responsiveness to reasons, a capacity that develops in children as they are initiated into traditions of thinking and reasoning. In this process of formation (or Bildung), children enter 'the space of reasons' to become rational agents in self-conscious control of their thoughts and actions. In addition to exploring McDowell's ideas, Bakhurst draws on a variety of thinkers - including Davidson, Hacking, Ilyenkov, Strawson, Vygotsky, Wiggins, and Wittgenstein - to illuminate questions of personhood, identity, learning, rationality, and freedom. Offering an intellectually stimulating exploration of the conceptual foundations of the philosophy of education, The Formation of Reason breathes fresh life into a familiar but controversial idea: that the end of education is the cultivation of autonomy"--