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Michael Peters

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  •  Publications
    402
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    34

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  • All publications (402)
  • Citizen science and post-normal science in a posttruth era : democratising knowledge, socialising responsibility
    with Tina Besley
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
  • Life and death in the anthropocene : educating for survival amid climate and ecosystem changes and potential civilisation collapse
    with Tina Besley
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    Philosophy of Education
  • The threat of nuclear war : peace studies in an apocalyptic age
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    Philosophy of EducationNuclear War
  • Education for ecological democracy
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
  • Russian apocalypse, Christian fascism and the dangers of a limited nuclear war
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    Philosophy of EducationNuclear War
  • Declinism' and discourses of decline : the end of the war in Afghanistan and the limits of American power
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
  • Civilizational collapse, eschatological narratives and apocalyptic philosophy
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    Philosophy of Education
  • Western civilization
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    Philosophy of Education
  •  1
    Introduction : global apocalypse : educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival
    with Tina Besley
    In Michael Peters (ed.), Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    Philosophy of Education
  •  44
    Educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival (edited book)
    Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2024.
    This collection concerns educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival. It is based on a series of editorials and articles written by Michael A Peters as the Editor of Educational Philosophy and Theory journal, together with colleagues in a couple of co-authored chapters, to explore the concept of global apocalypse from the educational philosophy lens. This fourteenth volume in the Editor's Choice series provides insights into the philosophy of education as it relates to the concepts of…Read more
    This collection concerns educational philosophy and post-apocalyptical survival. It is based on a series of editorials and articles written by Michael A Peters as the Editor of Educational Philosophy and Theory journal, together with colleagues in a couple of co-authored chapters, to explore the concept of global apocalypse from the educational philosophy lens. This fourteenth volume in the Editor's Choice series provides insights into the philosophy of education as it relates to the concepts of civilizational collapse, discourses of decline, educating for survival amid climate emergency, cultural apocalypse and the pandemic. It will be of interest to scholars in philosophy of education and anyone who is working in the field of post-apocalyptic studies.
    Philosophy of Education
  •  48
    ‘Declinism’ and discourses of decline - the end of the war in Afghanistan and the limits of American power
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (14): 1591-1598. 2023.
    Taliban forces of 75,000 overran the well-equipped 300,000+ strong Afghan army, trained and supported by US-NATO military, in a world-shattering week that toppled the US Afghan client regime and bo...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  39
    Western civilization 101
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (14): 1582-1590. 2023.
    The concept of civilization in the West recognizes the origins of the term in civitas and civilité as the development of civil society and, in particular, the expression of the history of sympathy,...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  92
    Civilizational collapse, eschatological narratives and apocalyptic philosophy
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (14): 1599-1607. 2023.
    COVV: I say to myself that the earth is extinguished, though I never saw it lit. (Pause.) It’s easy going. (Pause.) When I fall I’ll weep for happiness. (Pause. He goes towards door.)HAMM: Clov! (C...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  80
    The early origins of neoliberalism: Colloque Walter Lippman (1938) and the Mt Perelin Society (1947)
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (14): 1574-1581. 2023.
    The term ‘neoliberalism’ passed into popular usage among left-wing commentators in the late 1970s as an essentially pejorative short-hand description for free market policies that were developed an...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  2
    The Idea of the University: Volume 2: Contemporary Perspectives (edited book)
    with R. Barnett
    . 2018.
  •  19
    11 Humanism, Derrida, and the new humanities
    In Gert Biesta & Denise Egéa-Kuehne (eds.), Derrida & education, Routledge. pp. 10--209. 2001.
    Jacques DerridaDerrida: Value Theory
  •  85
    Historizing Subjectivity in Childhood Studies
    with Viktor Johansson
    Linguistic and Philosophical Investigations 11 42-61. 2012.
    Historizing Subjectivity in Childhood Studies
    Social and Political Philosophy
  • Introduction: Fragments of thinking, thinking in systems
    In Academic Writing, Philosophy and Genre, Wiley-blackwell. 2009.
    Philosophy, General Works
  •  47
    Education, philosophy and politics: the selected works of Michael A. Peters
    Routlede. 2012.
    Introduction: education, philosophy and politics -- Writing the self: Wittgenstein, confession and pedagogy -- Nietzsche, nihilism and the critique of modernity: post-Nietzschean philosophy of education -- Heidegger, education and modernity -- Truth-telling as an educational practice of the self: Foucault and the ethics of subjectivity -- Neoliberal governmentality: Foucault on the birth of biopolitics -- Lyotard, nihilism and education -- Gilles Deleuze's 'societies of control': from disciplina…Read more
    Introduction: education, philosophy and politics -- Writing the self: Wittgenstein, confession and pedagogy -- Nietzsche, nihilism and the critique of modernity: post-Nietzschean philosophy of education -- Heidegger, education and modernity -- Truth-telling as an educational practice of the self: Foucault and the ethics of subjectivity -- Neoliberal governmentality: Foucault on the birth of biopolitics -- Lyotard, nihilism and education -- Gilles Deleuze's 'societies of control': from disciplinary pedagogy to perpetual training -- Geophilosophy, education and the pedagogy of the concept - Humanism, Derrida and the new humanities -- Politics and deconstruction: Derrida, neoliberalism and democracy -- Neopragmatism, ethnocentrism and the politics of the ethnos: Rorty's 'postmodernist bourgeois liberalism' -- Achieving America: postmodernism and Rorty's critique of the cultural left -- Deranging the investigations: Cavell on the philosophy of the child -- White philosophy in/of America.
    Philosophy of EducationMichel FoucaultGilles DeleuzeDerrida: Social and Political Philosophy
  •  32
    Kinds of Thinking, Styles of Reasoning
    In Mark Mason (ed.), Critical Thinking and Learning, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction: Why the Present Emphasis on Thinking? Kinds of Thinking: Heidegger on What is Called Thinking? Wittgenstein on Thinking Styles of Reasoning Notes References.
  •  85
    Global Britain’: The China challenge and Post-Brexit Britain as a ‘science superpower
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (8): 871-876. 2023.
    The British PM Boris Johnson is impressed with the way British science ‘liberated’ the public from Covid-19. He is reported as indicating that never before has the British people owed so much to sc...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  126
    Contemporary Chinese Marxism: Basic research orientations
    with Liu Xiang, Liu Ying, Yang Liyin, Lei Chen, Xue Ji, Zhang Libo, Nie Jinfang, Wu Xiangdong, Wang Yichuan, and Chengbing Wang
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (11): 1740-1753. 2022.
    Chengbing WangShanxi University, Taiyuan, ChinaMichael A. PetersBeijing Normal University, Beijing, ChinaContemporary Chinese Marxism is not only an important theory in the humanities and social sc...
    19th Century British PhilosophySocialism and Marxism
  •  137
    Writing the self: Wittgenstein, confession and pedagogy
    Journal of Philosophy of Education 34 (2). 2000.
    In this paper I investigate ‘the confessional’ as an aspect of Wittgenstein's style both as a mode of philosophising and as a mode of ‘writing the self’, tied explicitly to pedagogical practices. There are strong links between Wittgenstein's confessional mode of philosophising and his life—for him philosophy is a way of life —and interesting theoretical connections between confessional practices and pedagogy, usefully explored in the writings of the French philosopher, Michel Foucault. The Inves…Read more
    In this paper I investigate ‘the confessional’ as an aspect of Wittgenstein's style both as a mode of philosophising and as a mode of ‘writing the self’, tied explicitly to pedagogical practices. There are strong links between Wittgenstein's confessional mode of philosophising and his life—for him philosophy is a way of life —and interesting theoretical connections between confessional practices and pedagogy, usefully explored in the writings of the French philosopher, Michel Foucault. The Investigations provides a basis and springboard for understanding the notion of ‘writing the self’ as a pedagogical practice which encourages a confessional mode compelling us to tell the truth about ourselves and, thus, creating the conditions for ethico-poetical self-constitution.
    Ludwig WittgensteinPhilosophy of Education
  •  64
    Wittgenstein’s Education: 'A Picture Held Us Captive’
    with Jeff Stickney
    Springer Singapore. 2018.
    Dedicated to educators who are not philosophy specialists, this book offers an overview of the connections between Wittgenstein’s later philosophy and his own training and practice as an educator. Arguing for the centrality of education to Wittgenstein’s life and works, the authors resist any reduction of Wittgenstein’s philosophy to remarks on pedagogy while addressing the current controversy surrounding the role of training in the enculturation process. Significant events in his education and …Read more
    Dedicated to educators who are not philosophy specialists, this book offers an overview of the connections between Wittgenstein’s later philosophy and his own training and practice as an educator. Arguing for the centrality of education to Wittgenstein’s life and works, the authors resist any reduction of Wittgenstein’s philosophy to remarks on pedagogy while addressing the current controversy surrounding the role of training in the enculturation process. Significant events in his education and life are examined as the background for successful interpretation, without lending biographical details explanatory force. The book discusses the importance of Wittgenstein’s training and dismissal as an elementary teacher in light of his later, frequent use of many ‘scenes of instruction’ in his Cambridge lectures and notebooks. These depictions culminated in his now famous Philosophical Investigations -- a counter to his earlier philosophy in the Tractatus. Wittgenstein came to distinguish between empirical inquiries into how education, language or mathematics might ideally work, from grammatical studies of how we learn on the rough ground to normatively go-on as others do – often without explicit rules and with considerable degrees of ambiguity, for instance, in implementing new guidelines during a curriculum reform or in evaluating teachers. The book argues that Wittgenstein’s reflections on education -- spanning from mathematics training to the acquisition of language and cultivation of aesthetic appreciation -- are of central significance to both the man and his pedagogical style of philosophy.
  •  149
    Wittgenstein at Cambridge: Philosophy as a way of life
    with Jeff Stickney
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (8): 767-778. 2018.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein was a reclusive and enigmatic philosopher, writing his most significant work off campus in remote locations. He also held a chair in the Philosophy Department at Cambridge, and is one of the university’s most recognized even if, as Ray Monk says, ‘reluctant professors’ of philosophy. Paradoxically, although Wittgenstein often showed contempt for the atmosphere at Cambridge and for academic philosophy in particular, it is hard to conceive of him making his significant contribu…Read more
    Ludwig Wittgenstein was a reclusive and enigmatic philosopher, writing his most significant work off campus in remote locations. He also held a chair in the Philosophy Department at Cambridge, and is one of the university’s most recognized even if, as Ray Monk says, ‘reluctant professors’ of philosophy. Paradoxically, although Wittgenstein often showed contempt for the atmosphere at Cambridge and for academic philosophy in particular, it is hard to conceive of him making his significant contributions without considerable support from his academic colleagues, his research fellowship and later teaching career at Cambridge. It is this conflicted relationship we explore, between the revolutionary thinker and his base within an educational institution. Starting from a brief biographical sketch of Wittgenstein’s academic life at Cambridge, including his involvement as a student and faculty member in the Moral Sciences Club, we look at how he reconceived the role of philosophy throughout this...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  59
    The WHO, the global governance of health and pandemic politics
    with Stephanie Hollings, Benjamin Green, and Moses Oladele Ogunniran
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (6): 707-716. 2022.
    The World Health Organization has been subjected to serious criticism for its handling of the COVID-19 virus, specifically that it failed to act decisively to stop the global outbreak and tha...
    Philosophy of Education
  •  65
    The University and the New Humanities
    Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 3 (1): 41-57. 2004.
    Recently, Derrida has pointed to the university to come and the future of the professions within a place of resistance, and yet maintained the historical link to two ideas that mediate and condition both the humanities and the performative structure of acts of profession: human rights and crimes against humanity. Derrida maintains that the ‘modern university should be unconditional’, by which he means that it should have the ‘freedom’ to assert, to question, to profess, and to ‘say everything’ i…Read more
    Recently, Derrida has pointed to the university to come and the future of the professions within a place of resistance, and yet maintained the historical link to two ideas that mediate and condition both the humanities and the performative structure of acts of profession: human rights and crimes against humanity. Derrida maintains that the ‘modern university should be unconditional’, by which he means that it should have the ‘freedom’ to assert, to question, to profess, and to ‘say everything’ in the manner of a literary fiction. This article reviews what Derrida calls ‘the future of the profession or the university without conditions’. Second, it focuses on a series of criticisms raised by Richard Rorty against Derrida’s concept of literature and on Derrida’s status as a ‘private ironist’. Third, the article examines Derrida in relation to the ends of literature and the university, under the impact of globalization and new technologies of communication. Finally, in a postscript the article returns to the concept of the university and its postcolonial possibilities.
  •  56
    ‘The fascism in our heads’: Reich, Fromm, Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari – the social pathology of fascism in the 21st century
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (9): 1276-1284. 2022.
    Gilles DeleuzeMichel Foucault
  •  27
    The end of the decade: Reflecting on 2019 and looking forward to the next decade
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (9): 1271-1275. 2022.
  •  59
    The disorder of things: Quarantine unemployment, the decline of neoliberalism, and the Covid-19 lockdown crash
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (12): 1195-1198. 2021.
    Rarely in economics does the field see such unambiguous causation as in the case of the Covid-19 shut down of the global economy. Pretty well every economist would agree to this proposition and whi...
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