Results for 'Popular education'

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  1.  8
    Popular Education and Socialization in the Nineteenth Century.W. P. McCann (ed.) - 2007 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1977, this volume analyzes aspects of elementary schooling in the nineteenth century and the ways in which it prepared working-class children for life in industrial Britain. The book examines: The procedures and practices of different types of schools. The ideologies guiding elementary education The social implications of curriculum content and pupils’ and parents’ attitudes to the education provided by the church and state.
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  2.  39
    Popular Education in Protestant England.Timothy Corcoran - 1933 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 8 (2):181-201.
  3.  16
    Popular Education and Democratic Thought in AmericaEducation and the Cult of Efficiency.Vernon Mallinson, Rush Welter & Raymond E. Callahan - 1963 - British Journal of Educational Studies 12 (1):87.
  4.  2
    Evangelical Religion and Popular Education: A Modern Interpretation.John McLeish - 2016 - Routledge.
    Under the influence of the evangelical movement in the 18th and early 19th centuries education, in one form or another, was brought to a vast number of people in England and Wales. Originally published in 1969, it is this phenomenon that forms the subject of Dr McLeish’s book. The two central figures are Griffith Jones and Hannah More and the movements are seen almost entirely through their work. Dr McLeish examines the nature and aims of the schools which were (...)
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  5.  1
    The Concept of Popular Education: A Study of Ideas and Social Movements in the Early Nineteenth Century.Harold Silver - 2007 - Routledge.
    Originally published 1965. This reprints the 1977 edition which included a new introduction. From the starting point of "popular" charity education, the book traces the dynamic of ideological and social change from the 1790s to the 1830s in terms of attitudes to education and analyzes the range of contemporary opinions on popular education. It also examines some of the channels through which ideas about education were disseminated and became common currency in popular movements.
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  6.  12
    Critical consciousness‐raising, popular education and liberation in community health nursing: Let's start the debate.Hélène Laperrière - 2018 - Nursing Philosophy 19 (1):e12199.
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  7.  4
    Counter hegemony, popular education, and resistances: A systematic literature review on the squatters’ movement.Julia Ballesteros-Quilez, Pablo Rivera-Vargas & Judith Jacovkis - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The squatting movement is a social movement that seeks to use unoccupied land or temporarily or permanently abandoned buildings as farmland, housing, meeting places, or centers for social and cultural purposes. Its main motivation is to denounce and at the same time respond to the economic difficulties that activists believe exist to realize the right to housing. Much of what we know about this movement comes from the informational and journalistic literature generated by actors that are close or even belong (...)
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  8.  5
    H. H. Milman and popular education, 1846.R. E. Aldrich - 1973 - British Journal of Educational Studies 21 (2):172-179.
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  9. National Education Policy and Popular Education: A Reconsideration of Cremin's The Genius of American Education.D. Holdzkom - 2006 - Journal of Thought 41 (3):79.
  10.  12
    Scaling down the Earth’s history: Visual materials for popular education by Nérée Boubée (1806–1862).Silvia F. De M. Figueirôa - 2023 - History of Science 61 (3):383-408.
    Spatial and temporal scales are essential components of geological sciences; both are almost always imbricated in complex ways, challenging geoscientific knowledge among nonspecialists and students. The present paper focuses on the efforts made by the French naturalist Simon-Suzanne Nérée Boubée (1806–62) regarding popular education on geology. Though Boubée is poorly known nowadays, he experienced some prestige during his lifetime. He worked as an independent teacher, offering private as well as free public courses. Boubée, as a nineteenth-century science popularizer, (...)
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  11.  67
    Benthamites and Lancasterians—The Relationship between the followers of Bentham and the British and Foreign School Society during the early years of Popular Education.George F. Bartle - 1991 - Utilitas 3 (2):275.
    Much has been written about the Benthamite theories of education and their debt to monitorialism. Bentham himself, in Chrestomathia, based his blueprint for the schools of the future on the use of monitors, and James Mill, in his various articles on education, envisaged universal schooling within a monitorial framework. In more recent times, scholars, such as Burston, have discussed the influence of the theory of mutual instruction on Utilitarian educational thought. Yet in all this output, little attention has (...)
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  12. Movimentos sociais e educação popular no contexto das sociedades complexas: desafios políticos e epistemológicos // Social movements and popular education in the context of complex societies: political and epistemological chalenges.Telmo Marcon - 2015 - Conjectura: Filosofia E Educação 20 (2):53-76.
    O presente artigo, de natureza bibliográfica, objetiva discutir alguns desafios políticos e epistemológicos postos aos movimentos sociais e à educação popular no contexto das sociedades complexas. Parte-se do reconhecimento que estamos vivendo, nas últimas décadas, transformações profundas que impactam em todas as dimensões da vida tanto individual quanto social. Esses processos ocorrem em espaços locais, mas impactam globalmente, assim como existem tendências globalizantes que impactam nos espaços locais, na subjetividade e nas relações intersubjetivas. O incremento de tecnologias acelera esses (...)
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  13.  26
    17. Education Through Sport: Towards Recognition of Popular Practice.Ejgil Jespersen - 2009 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 3 (3):426-440.
  14.  36
    Popular art and education.Richard Shusterman - 1995 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 13 (3):203-212.
  15.  9
    Between Training and Popularization: Regulating Science Textbooks in Secondary Education.Adam R. Shapiro - 2012 - Isis 103 (1):99-110.
    ABSTRACT Recruitment into the scientific community is one oft-stated goal of science education—in the post-Sputnik United States, for example—but this obscures the fact that science textbooks are often read by people who will never be scientists. It cannot be presupposed that science textbooks for younger audiences, students in primary and secondary schools, function in this way. For this reason, precollegiate-level science textbooks are sometimes discussed as a subset of literature popularizing science. The high school science classroom and the textbook (...)
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  16.  10
    Analysing Historical Narratives: On Academic, Popular and Educational Framings of the Past, edited by Stefan Berger, Nicola Brauch and Chris Lorenz.Adam Timmins - 2023 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 18 (1):95-100.
  17.  11
    Illness Narratives in Popular Music: An Untapped Resource for Medical Education.Andrew Childress & Monica Lou - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (4):533-552.
    Illness narratives convey a person’s feelings, thoughts, beliefs, and descriptions of suffering and healing as a result of physical or mental breakdown. Recognized genres include fiction, nonfiction, poetry, plays, and films. Like poets and playwrights, musicians also use their life experiences as fodder for their art. However, illness narratives as expressed through popular music are an understudied and underutilized source of insights into the experience of suffering, healing, and coping with illness, disease, and death. Greater attention to the value (...)
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  18. Democracy and popular music in music education.K. Snell - 2009 - In June Countryman & Elizabeth Gould (eds.), Exploring Social Justice: How Music Education Might Matter. Canadian Music Educators' Association = Association Canadienne des Musiciens Éducateurs. pp. 166--183.
     
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  19. Popular Culture and Lettered Culture in Ancient Vietnam.Lê Thành Khôi - 1986 - Diogenes 34 (133):122-143.
    In all societies that have arrived at a certain degree of social differentiation, there are two types of culture that may be qualified respectively as “popular” and “lettered”. Popular culture is that of the people as opposed to the dominant political and intellectual classes. The latter two may be distinct (but allied), as in ancient India with the pair Brahman-kshatriva. or mixed as in Confucian China with the bureaucracy of scholars-civil servants. The duality between the two kinds of (...)
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  20.  8
    Anti-education: on the future of our educational institutions.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 2016 - New York: New York Review Books. Edited by Damion Searls.
    AN NYRB Classics Original In 1869, at the age of twenty-four, the precociously brilliant Friedrich Nietzsche was appointed to a professorship of classical philology at the University of Basel. He seemed marked for a successful and conventional academic career. Then the philosophy of Schopenhauer and the music of Wagner transformed his ambitions. The genius of such thinkers and makers—the kind of genius that had emerged in ancient Greece—this alone was the touchstone for true understanding. But how was education to (...)
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  21.  4
    Anti-education.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 2015 - New York: New York Review Books.
    AN NYRB Classics Original In 1869, at the age of twenty-four, the precociously brilliant Friedrich Nietzsche was appointed to a professorship of classical philology at the University of Basel. He seemed marked for a successful and conventional academic career. Then the philosophy of Schopenhauer and the music of Wagner transformed his ambitions. The genius of such thinkers and makers—the kind of genius that had emerged in ancient Greece—this alone was the touchstone for true understanding. But how was education to (...)
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  22.  33
    From Within the Belly of the Beast: Rethinking the Concept of the 'Educational Marketplace' in the Popular Discourse of Education Reform.Scott Ellison - 2012 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 48 (2):119-136.
    The task of this article is to carry out a synthetic analysis of the concept of the educational marketplace as it is used in the popular discourse of education reform so as to unpack what has become a commonsensical idea in American politics. It is a conceptual framework that has opened an ever-expanding sovereign space in the American state for the colonization of a public institution by the private sphere by means of public policy. The results of this (...)
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  23.  14
    Pensar epistémico, educación popular e investigación participativa.Alfonso Torres C. - 2019 - CDMX: Editora Nómada.
    Pensar epistémico, educación popular e investigación participativa es un testimonio intelectual acerca de tres figuras emblemáticas del pensamiento crítico latinoamericano: Orlando Fals Borda, Paulo Freire y Hugo Zemelman. Alfonso Torres Carrillo, educador popular colombiano, expone su propia interpretación, nutrida por el diálogo con estos tres pensadores, sobre la vigencia (y trascendencia) de sus propuestas críticas y de acción social. Redimensiona, así, estas tres vertientes teóricas y metodológicas en América Latina: el pensar epistémico, la educación popular y el (...)
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  24.  87
    Education, literacy, and humanization: exploring the work of Paulo Freire.Peter Roberts - 2000 - Westport, Conn.: Bergin & Garvey.
    Provides a critical introduction to the work of Paulo Freire, paying particular attention to later texts.
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  25.  24
    Popular Culture and the Dilemma of Corruption in Nigeria.Adekunle A. Ibrahim & Samuel Otu Ishaya - 2018 - Human and Social Studies 7 (3):47-65.
    This paper examines the nexus between popular culture and the problem of corruption in Nigeria within the theoretical framework of the Socratic dictum that “the unexamined life is not worth living”. The paper argues that corruption is a social behavior that is propelled by popular culture and sustained by skewed application of logical thinking in critical decision making. Hence, the paper posits that formal education remains the bedrock upon which corruption can be curtailed and also equips people (...)
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  26.  8
    Intelligent Accountability: Re-Thinking the Concept of “Accountability” in the Popular Discourse of Education Policy.Scott Ellison - 2012 - Journal of Thought 47 (2):19.
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  27.  4
    Paulo Freire e a educação popular: esperançar em tempos de barbárie.Joana Salém Vasconcelos, Maíra Tavares Mendes & Daniela Mussi (eds.) - 2023 - São Paulo, Brasil: Elefante.
  28.  7
    The legacy of postmodernism in popular thought and the emergence of “Inter/trans relational” -isms in educational theory.Joseph Levitan - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1498-1499.
  29.  8
    Cultural and Intercultural Experiences in European Higher Education: Essays on Popular and Higher Education since 1980.S. Marriott & B. J. Hake - 1996 - British Journal of Educational Studies 44 (1):100-101.
  30.  13
    Crash Course History of Science: Popular Science for General Education?Allison Marsh & Bethany Johnson - 2020 - Isis 111 (3):588-594.
  31.  13
    Re-Thinking the Concept of “Accountability” in the Popular Discourse of Education Policy.Scott Ellison - forthcoming - Journal of Thought.
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  32.  24
    Professionalization and the Null Curriculum: The Case of the Popular Eugenics Movement and American Educational Studies.R. Gregory Browning, Harvey Neufeldt, Betty A. Sichel, John O. Geiger, John E. Carter, W. Paul Vogt, Gay L. Gullickson & William A. Reid - 1987 - Educational Studies 18 (2):239-279.
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  33.  8
    Professionalization and the Null Curriculum: The Case of the Popular Eugenics Movement and American Educational Studies.Steven Selden - 1987 - Educational Studies 18 (2):221-238.
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  34.  22
    Popular Science in Eighteenth Century Almanacs: The Editorial Career of Henry Andrews of Royston, 1780–1820.Jennifer C. Mori - 2016 - History of Science 54 (1):19-44.
    English popular science was more than a mid-nineteenth century phenomenon, whether defined as practical, utilitarian and comprehensible knowledge, or as a nexus of ¡deas, rhetoric and practice. All these criteria were fulfilled in four Stationers’ Company almanacs for forty years by Henry Andrews, an astronomer, mathematician, astrologer and meteorologist. Andrews employed these as instruments for an extensive campaign in the history of science education devised to acquaint working class readers with the key figures, ideas and methodologies of science.
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  35.  52
    Emotion Education without Ontological Commitment?Kristján Kristjánsson - 2009 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 29 (3):259-274.
    Emotion education is enjoying new-found popularity. This paper explores the ‘cosy consensus’ that seems to have developed in education circles, according to which approaches to emotion education are immune from metaethical considerations such as contrasting rationalist and sentimentalist views about the moral ontology of emotions. I spell out five common assumptions of recent approaches to emotion education and explore their potential compatibility with four paradigmatic moral ontologies. I argue that three of these ontologies fail to harmonise (...)
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  36. Education in Britain 1944 to the Present.Ken Jones - 2004 - British Journal of Educational Studies 52 (2):199-200.
    In the decades after 1944 the four nations of Britain shared a common educational programme. By 2015, this programme had fragmented: the patterns of schooling and higher education in Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and England resembled each other less and less. This new edition of the popular _Education in Britain_ traces and explains this process of divergence, as well as the arguments and conflicts that have accompanied it. With a reach that extends from the primary school to the (...)
     
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  37.  11
    Popular Philosophy and Popular Economics: Bertrand Russell, 1919-70.J. E. King - 2007 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 27 (2).
    By 1918 Bertrand Russell had well-formed and distinctive opinions on many aspects of economic philosophy, theory and policy. In the second half of his life (1919–70) he wrote at great length on a very wide range of economic issues, including modern technology and the prospects for abolishing scarcity; population growth, eugenics and birth control; the economic development of China; the case for democratic socialism; the case against Soviet communism; the causes of economic crises; and the economic background to war and (...)
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  38.  25
    An aesthetic education in the era of globalization.Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak - 2012 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    Preface -- Introduction -- The burden of English -- Who claims alterity? -- How to read a "culturally different" book -- The double bind starts to kick in -- Culture: situating feminism -- Teaching for the times -- Acting bits/identity talk -- Supplementing Marxism -- What's left of theory? -- Echo -- Translation as culture -- Translating into English -- Nationalism and the imagination -- Resident alien -- Ethics and politics in Tagore, Coetzee, and certain scenes of teaching -- Imperative (...)
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  39.  44
    Education in Britain: 1944 to the Present.Ken Jones - 2016 - Polity.
    In the decades after 1944 the four nations of Britain shared a common educational programme. By 2015, this programme had fragmented: the patterns of schooling and higher education in Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and England resembled each other less and less. This new edition of the popular _Education in Britain_ traces and explains this process of divergence, as well as the arguments and conflicts that have accompanied it. With a reach that extends from the primary school to the (...)
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  40.  12
    Éducation populaire : Une histoire française.Geneviève Poujol - 2005 - Hermes 42:126.
    L'Éducation populaire apparaît en France à la fin du XIXe siècle, quand l'École devient un enjeu politique important, qui voit s'affronter catholiques et laïques. C'est pour se situer par rapport à la montée du mouvement ouvrier que le monde catholique va «aller au peuple», via des structures de formation liées à des associations de jeunesse chrétienne. Les laïques répondront à travers la création de La Ligue de l'Enseignement, et plus tard des Universités populaires, liées à des partis de gauche. Dans (...)
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  41.  15
    Popular Culture.J. Gingell & E. P. Brandon - 2000 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 34 (3):461-485.
    J. Gingell, E. P. Brandon; Popular Culture, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 34, Issue 3, 7 March 2003, Pages 461–485, https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-97.
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  42.  69
    Ethics education for professionals in japan: A critical review.Yasushi Maruyama & Tetsu Ueno - 2010 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 42 (4):438-447.
    Ethics education for professionals has become popular in Japan over the last two decades. Many professional schools now require students to take an applied ethics or professional ethics course. In contrast, very few courses of professional ethics for teaching exist or have been taught in Japan. In order to obtain suggestions for teacher education, this paper reviews and examines practices of ethics education for engineers and nurses in Japan that have been successfully implemented. The paper concludes (...)
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  43.  9
    Popularizing precision: cultures of exactness at the Paris observatory, 1667–1742.David Aubin - 2024 - Annals of Science 81 (1):139-159.
    This article maps out the lexical landscape of precision from the late seventeenth to the early eighteenth century and investigate the various meanings of precision, both as a word and a concept, within the Paris Observatory and beyond. It argues that precision was first an attribute of instruments supposed to produce numerical measurements, like clocks and divided circles or sectors attached to optical devices. Less often, precision was applied to observers, the handling of instruments, and observational methods, including mathematical corrections (...)
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  44.  5
    On Education and Values: In Praise of Pariahs and Nomads.George David Miller & Conrad P. Pritscher (eds.) - 1995 - Rodopi.
    The educationally emaciated, suffering from intellectual and spiritual bilumia, binge on facts and linear thinking. The imprimatur of clarity and the infatuation with quantification are accoutrements of this affliction, often characterized by apathy. Chaos is introduced as the wrecking ball for the hierarchical skyscrapers that overcrowd the educational skyline. The type of chaos proposed can be explained by the neutron bomb analogy. Chaos destroys all that is inessential but leaves standing the essential and promotes holistic rather than compartmentalized learning. The (...)
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  45.  9
    Inoperative learning: a radical rewriting of educational potentialities.Tyson E. Lewis - 2018 - New York, NY: Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an Informa Business.
    Inoperative Learning draws upon the movement towards a weak philosophy that is currently gaining ground in educational philosophy: this weak philosophy does not offer a set of solutions or guidelines for improving educational outcomes, but rather renders assumptions about the theory-practice coupling that is so popular in contemporary education inoperative. By arguing that such logic reduces education to merely instrumental ends, which can only be assessed in terms of predefined measurement tools, this book presents a challenge to (...)
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  46.  3
    Educación Popular.Domingo Faustino Sarmiento & Adelmo Montenegro - 1989 - Buenos Aires: Banco de la Provincia de Cordoba. Edited by Adelmo Montenegro.
  47.  80
    Reflecting ‘Popular Culture’: The Introduction, Diffusion, and Construction of the Reflecting Telescope in the Netherlands.Huib J. Zuidervaart - 2004 - Annals of Science 61 (4):407-452.
    The eighteenth century was an era in which science came to play a major role in the cultural ideal of the city elite. The phenomenon of the ‘gentleman-scientist’ arose: a layman without a scientific education who for a variety of often socially desirable reasons devoted himself to scientific endeavours. Scientific instruments were the tools for this interest. This article describes the introduction, diffusion, and construction in the Netherlands of one of the most prominent eighteenth-century instruments: the reflecting telescope. The (...)
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  48.  8
    Education Since 1800.Ivor Morrish - 2007 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1970, this volume provides a survey of the wide field of the development of education since 1800. The book is structured as follows: Part One: The General Development of Popular Education English Elementary Education, the Development of Primary Education, English Secondary Education Part Two: Specific Topics in Education Independent, Private and Public Schools, Technical and Technological Education, The Universities, Teacher Training, Further and Adult Education, The Youth Services Part (...)
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  49.  28
    Teaching the territory: agroecological pedagogy and popular movements.Nils McCune & Marlen Sánchez - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (3):595-610.
    This contribution traces the parallel development of two distinct approaches to peasant agroecological education: the peasant-to-peasant horizontal method that disseminated across Mesoamerica and the Caribbean beginning in the 1970s, and the political-agroecological training schools of combined consciousness-building and skill-formation that have been at the heart of the educational processes of member organizations of La Via Campesina since the 1990s. Applying a theoretical framework that incorporates territorial struggle, agroecology and popular education, we examine spatial and organizational aspects of (...)
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  50. Anthropology, history, and education.Immanuel Kant - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Günter Zöller & Robert B. Louden.
    Anthropology, History, and Education contains all of Kant's major writings on human nature. Some of these works, which were published over a thirty-nine year period between 1764 and 1803, have never before been translated into English. Kant's question 'What is the human being?' is approached indirectly in his famous works on metaphysics, epistemology, moral and legal philosophy, aesthetics and the philosophy of religion, but it is approached directly in his extensive but less well-known writings on physical and cultural anthropology, (...)
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