ABSTRACT

It is sometimes said that the philosophy of education is not a serious and coherent philosophical area of inquiry. John Wilson examines this argument, taking it as the starting point for his book. He believes that most 'philosophy of education' until now has been little more than the promotion of particular ideologies, and that progress can be made only by a more analytical approach. The central problems lies in establishing a few basic concepts, principles and categories and questions which will form the skeleton of the subject. He therefore outlines the nature of 'philosophy of education' and defines some of its major problems by examining key notions such as the value of education, the nature and implications of learning and what should be learned.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction Philosophy and education

part I|39 pages

Education

chapter 1|21 pages

The words and the enterprise

chapter 2|17 pages

Mistakes and methodology

part II|48 pages

Learning

chapter 3|20 pages

The implications of learning

chapter 4|27 pages

What there is to learn

part III|74 pages

Education and human nature

chapter 5|21 pages

Happiness and learning

chapter 6|23 pages

Seriousness and fantasy

chapter 7|29 pages

Love and morality