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Original Articles

The Schizophrenia of Contemporary Education and the Moral Work of Teaching

Pages 285-307 | Published online: 07 Jan 2015
 

Notes

Notes

1 Stocker is of course speaking quite loosely when using the term schizophrenia, as some sort of psychological bifurcation or split, and I follow that loose use of the term, and do not intend to make any claims about the actual psychological condition, or about the people who have it. The term has been applied to teaching by CitationLieberman (1982) and CitationBall (2003).

2 On this view, one might be said to have reasons for acting (according to an ethical theory) which may or may not actually motivate actions. For more on this and related distinctions, see CitationDarwall (1997).

3 I use the basic term ideology advisedly, despite its many definitions, all of which have been shown to have limitations of some sort (see CitationEagleton, 1991). As used here, it is intended to mean a set of ideas, discourses, and practices guiding a significant social domain, seeking their own legitimation, even at the expense of other legitimate and relevant claims (based on value and/or empirical evidence).

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