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  1. Reading Kant as a radical empiricist: or how to find an orientation for education after progress.Joris Vlieghe - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (6):1059-1071.
    This article deals with the educational challenge of responding to the pending ecological crisis (and many other future apocalyptic scenarios that haunt our imagination). It seems we are living in a time when we have given up on the idea that progress is possible or desirable, and this questions education at its roots. In order to find a proper educational response that befits our time, it is requested that we gain a new sense of orientation (which is no longer aimed (...)
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  • Learning after progress? Isabelle Stengers, artificial learning, and the future as problem.Hans Schildermans - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (6):1044-1058.
    The aim of this article is to rethink the relation between education and progress, claiming that discourses of progress tend to project specific visions of the future and thereby instrumentalize education to achieve these visions while foreclosing other possible futures. The first part of the paper argues that the historical pact between education and progress has been recently recast in terms of learning. Learning receives at the same time an economic and a political interpretation in this context, turning issues such (...)
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  • Finding one’s way: a response to the idea of an education after progress.Elisabet Langmann - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 57 (6):1119-1126.
    Inspired by the work of Hannah Arendt, this response article focusses on the tension between hope in the future and lost hope in the present inherent in the modern idea of progress. The backdrop of the Suite ‘Education after Progress’ is some of the interrelated challenges that we are facing today, such as climate change, new pandemics, mass migration, and the rise of populism. Drawing on different philosophical concepts and strands, the five articles in the Suite explore what it would (...)
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