Affiliation:
1. Department of Philosophy, University of Nottingham, University Park , Humanities Building, NG7 2RD , UK
Abstract
Abstract
In this paper we explore the connection between the act of teaching and the imparting of knowledge. Our overarching aim is to demonstrate that the connection between them is less tight than one might suppose. Our stepping off point is a recent paper by David Bakhurst who (on one reading, at least) takes a strong view, opposed to our own. On our reading, Bakhurst argues that there is a tight conceptual connection between teaching and the imparting of knowledge. We argue that this is not the case; the connection does not hold. We then consider several ways we might weaken the alleged conceptual connection between teaching and knowledge, finally considering two ways of severing the conceptual connection altogether, whilst at the same time allowing that much teaching does indeed lead to the imparting of knowledge. We argue that such views are to be preferred.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Philosophy,History,Education
Reference21 articles.
1. The Formation of Reason
2. Learning from Others;Bakhurst;Journal of Philosophy of Education,2013
3. Teaching, Telling and Technology;Bakhurst;Journal of Philosophy of Education,2020
4. Receiving the Gift of Teaching: from “Learning from” to “Being Taught by”;Biesta;Studies in Philosophy and Rducation,2013
5. True Enough;Elgin;Philosophical Issues,2004
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