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155The Educational Mode of DevelopmentEducational Philosophy and Theory 45 (5): 477-481. 2013.No abstract
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84Challenges to the ‘World Order’ of Liberal Internationalism: What Can We Learn?Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (9). 2016.
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187Kinds of thinking, styles of reasoningEducational Philosophy and Theory 39 (4). 2007.There is no more central issue to education than thinking and reasoning. Certainly, such an emphasis chimes with the rationalist and cognitive deep structure of the Western educational tradition. The contemporary tendency reinforced by cognitive science is to treat thinking ahistorically and aculturally as though physiology, brain structure and human evolution are all there is to say about thinking that is worthwhile or educationally significant. The movement of critical thinking also tends to t…Read more
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111Education, Dialogue and Interculturalism: New directions and contextsEducational Philosophy and Theory 44 (9): 909-912. 2012.
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113Special issue – the learning society from the perspective of governmentalityEducational Philosophy and Theory 38 (4). 2006.j.1469-5812.2006.00220.x
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102Competing Conceptions of the Creative UniversityEducational Philosophy and Theory 46 (7): 713-717. 2014.
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130Higher learning, greater good: The private and social benefits of higher education – by W. W. McMahonEducational Philosophy and Theory 42 (4): 504-506. 2010.No Abstract
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82Editorial: Educational Philosophy and Theory: Celebrating the first 10 yearsEducational Philosophy and Theory 44 (10). 2012.Editor's Comment: One of the functions of the journal is to develop an awareness of its own history. These papers are online-only papers that discuss the first ten years of the journal going back to 1969. Every so often the journal publishes synoptic articles that take a broad approach to the beginning of the Society and the journal to treat major themes and topics. As one can clearly see EPAT published many of the luminaries that helped to shape the discipline
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173Three Forms of the Knowledge Economy: Learning, Creativity and OpennessBritish Journal of Educational Studies 58 (1): 67-88. 2010.This paper outlines and reviews three forms and associated discourses of the 'knowledge economy': the 'learning economy', based on the work of Bengt-Åke Lundvall; the 'creative economy' based on the work of Charles Landry, John Howkins and Richard Florida; and the 'open knowledge economy' based on the work of Yochai Benkler and others. Arguably, these three forms and discourses represent three recent related but different conceptions of the knowledge economy, each with clear significance and imp…Read more
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59Rhizomatic America and Arborescent Culture: Towards a new philosophy of danceEducational Philosophy and Theory 46 (14): 1489-1495. 2014.
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106Editorial: Festschrift: Essays in honour of James D. MarshallEducational Philosophy and Theory 37 (3). 2005.
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51The Unforeseen: Education and the flowers of sacrificeEducational Philosophy and Theory 48 (6). 2016.
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50Children in Crisis: The New Zealand caseEducational Philosophy and Theory 45 (1): 1-5. 2013.No abstract
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127Open Science, Philosophy and Peer ReviewEducational Philosophy and Theory 46 (3): 215-219. 2014.
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183James D. Marshall: Philosopher of education interview with Michael A. PetersEducational Philosophy and Theory 37 (3). 2005.
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102Educational Research and the Philosophy of ContextEducational Philosophy and Theory 44 (8): 793-800. 2012.
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86EditorialEducational Philosophy and Theory 37 (2). 2005.Editor's Comment: One of the functions of the journal is to develop an awareness of its own history. These papers are online-only papers that discuss the first ten years of the journal going back to 1969. Every so often the journal publishes synoptic articles that take a broad approach to the beginning of the Society and the journal to treat major themes and topics. As one can clearly see EPAT published many of the luminaries that helped to shape the discipline
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115The Humanist Bias in Western Philosophy and EducationEducational Philosophy and Theory 47 (11): 1128-1135. 2015.This paper argues that the bias in Western philosophy is tied to its humanist ideology that pictures itself as central to the natural history of humanity and is historically linked to the emergence of humanism as pedagogy.