Chapter 7: Knowledge and Learning
Supporting material
Committed knowledge: The modern past
The Buddha on Enlightenment
Al-Ghazzali on the sources of knowledge
9/11 at Eternal Grace School
John Locke on human understanding
Ibn Tufayl on knowledge from experience and the discovery of the creator
Descartes: ‘I think therefore I am’
Immanuel Kant on reason’s role in understanding
Aristotle on higher forms of knowledge
Matthew Arnold on learning ‘the best which has been thought and said’
E.D. Hirsch on ‘cultural literacy’
Knowledge relativism: More recent times
Sextus Empiricus, the sceptic, on not being dogmatic
Nietzsche on the impossibility of truth
Wittgenstein on the way we make meanings with language
Richard Rorty on truth and language
Aronowitz and Giroux on postmodern education
George Pell on the dictatorship of relativism
Knowledge repertoires: New learning
Socrates’ defence
Husserl on the task of science, in and of the lifeworld
They knew much more than we realised
Keywords
Knowledge
Science
Committed knowledge
Religious truths
Empirical truths
Rationalist truths
Canonical truths
Knowledge relativism
Epistemological relativism
Cultural relativism
Postmodernism
Knowledge repertoires
Experiencing the known
Experiencing the new
Conceptualising by naming
Conceptualising with theor
Analysing functionally
Analysing critically
Applying appropriately
Applying creatively
Knowledge processes
Experiencing the known
Experiencing the new
Conceptualising by naming
Conceptualising with theory
Analysing functionally
Analysing critically
Applying appropriately
Applying creatively
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