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2From Ricoeur to Action engages with the thinking of the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur (1913-2005) in order to propose innovative responses to 21st-century problems actively contributing to global conflict. Ricoeur's ability to draw from a diverse field of philosophers and theologians and to provide mediation to seemingly irreconcilable views often has both explicit and implicit practical application to socio-political questions. Here an international team of leading Ricoeur scholars develop cr…Read more
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104Universal individuals: national education in a globalized ageJournal of Philosophy of Education 59 (3-4): 464-469. 2025.Are there differences between the pedagogical approaches of East Asian and European cultures regarding the question of how to navigate the complex relations of the universal and the particular, the communal and the individual? By no means an abstract question, it calls for thought in what seems to be an increasingly volatile age: from political and social division and polarization, divergent forces of localization, globalization, and glocalization, increasing efforts to acknowledge and recognize…Read more
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45Bildung as educational purpose: reimagining the goals of religious educationEthics and Education 20 (1): 77-91. 2025.This paper develops work undertaken by the After Religious Education project which seeks to reimagine Religious Education in schools for a context in which both religious and non-religious worldviews are taken seriously. One of the longstanding challenges for RE teachers in schools in England has been how to reconcile the broad range of aims and purposes it is supposed to support in a context in which RE is increasingly perceived as confused, inconsistent, and irrelevant. Through a discussion of…Read more
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53Does a religious universalism haunt secular religious education?Journal of Philosophy of Education 59 (3-4): 527-545. 2024.Contemporary theories of non-confessional religious education (RE) imagine the subject as inclusive and non-indoctrinatory. Any latent confessional tendencies towards universalism—encouraging or promoting a singular religious vision—have been exorcised within secular, liberal education systems. But can universalism be so easily avoided? In this article, I argue that some forms of universalism are unjustified, while others are educationally inevitable. The argument acknowledges that failures to d…Read more
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131Beyond virtue and vice: A return to uncertaintyJournal of Philosophy of Education 56 (4): 497-501. 2022.Education is astonishingly simple. We have all been through it, whether as children or later in life—indeed, many of us are still going through it in some form or other; we all know what works; and we are all committed to realising its individual and social potential. Such a view of the matter might dispense with the need for philosophy of education altogether as the problems of education are seen as little more than puzzles to be solved. We know (or think that we know) what we want to achieve, …Read more
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84The Pharmakon of Educational Technology: The Disruptive Power of Attention in EducationStudies in Philosophy and Education 35 (3): 251-265. 2016.Is physical presence an essential aspect of a rich educational experience? Can forms of virtual encounter achieve engaged and sustained education? Technophiles and technophobes might agree that authentic personal engagement is educationally normative. They are more likely to disagree on how authentic engagement is best achieved. This article argues that educational thinking around digital pedagogy unhelpfully reinforces this polarising debate by failing to recognise that digitalisation is, as St…Read more
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104Thinking about God in an Age of Technology. By George PattisonHeythrop Journal 48 (2): 333-335. 2007.
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30Technology and the philosophy of religionCambridge Scholars Press. 2011.The last one hundred years has seen unimaginable technological progress transforming every aspect of human life. Yet we seem unable to shake a profound unease with the direction of modern technology and its ideological siblings, global capitalism and massive consumption. Philosophers such as Marcuse, Borgmann and especially Heidegger, have developed important analyses of technological society, however in this book David Lewin argues that their ideas have remained limited either by their secular …Read more
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80Religious influence and its protectionJournal of Philosophy of Education 58 (1): 128-135. 2024.John Tillson’s book Children, Religion and the Ethics of Influence addresses several themes: the ground and nature of ethical responsibility; the means and goals of ethical formative influence; the nature and ground of religious belief. In this article, I focus on the issue of justification for educational influence in general. Attention to this issue could avoid some intractable problems of specifically religious influence, most particularly the challenge of providing satisfactory criteria for …Read more
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30The power of exemplarity in religious educationJournal of Curriculum Studies 56 (3): 327-338. 2024.Calls for reframing the subject matter of Religious Education in schools include the tricky question of how to select from a world of potentially interesting and relevant material. Pedagogues have long questioned the educational logic that takes so-called substantive knowledge as its starting point and imagines education to follow a linear path from simple to complex. Scholars of Religious Studies have addressed similar questions of how to bring the subject matter to life through taking a more d…Read more
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111The hermeneutics of religious understanding in a postsecular ageEthics and Education 12 (1): 73-83. 2017.The argument of this article assumes that religious literacy is urgently needed in the present geopolitical context. Its urgency increases the more religion is viewed in opposition to criticality, as though religion entails an irrational and inviolable commitment, or leap of faith. This narrow view of religion is reinforced by certain rather dogmatic secular framings of religion, which require any and all forms of religious expression to be excluded from public life. Excluding religion from the …Read more
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55Thinking about God in an Age of Technology. By George Pattison (review)Heythrop Journal 50 (3): 565-566. 2009.
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62Review of Reconstructing ‘Education’ Through Mindful Attention: Positioning the Mind at the Center of Curriculum and Pedagogy, Oren ErgasStudies in Philosophy and Education 37 (3): 315-321. 2018.This paper provides a review of Reconstructing ‘Education' through Mindful Attention: Positioning the Mind at the Center of Curriculum and Pedagogy by Oren Ergas. The review examines the central argument of the book, namely that present educational theory and practice avoids substantial self-inquiry, paying lip service to reflective practice but stopping short of any real encounter with the complex dynamics of the self. In Ergas’ bold inquiry, we are invited to attend and to see for ourselves by…Read more
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60Who’s Afraid of Secularisation? Reframing the Debate Between Gearon and JacksonBritish Journal of Educational Studies 65 (4): 445-461. 2017.
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The educational awareness of the futureIn Friedrich Schleiermacher (ed.), F.D.E. Schleiermacher's outlines of the art of education: a translation & discussion, Peter Lang. 2022.
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76The leap of learningEthics and Education 9 (1): 113-126. 2014.This article seeks to elaborate the step of epistemological affirmation that exists within every movement of learning. My epistemological method is rooted in philosophical hermeneutics in contrast to empirical or rationalist traditions. I argue that any movement of learning is based upon an entry into a hermeneutical circle: one is thrown into, or leaps into, an interpretation which in some sense has to be temporarily affirmed or adopted in order to be either absorbed and integrated, or overcome…Read more
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44From Ricoeur to Action: The Socio-Political Significance of Ricoeur’s Thinking (edited book)Continuum. 2012.From Ricoeur to Action engages with the thinking of the French philosopher Paul Ricoeur (1913-2005) in order to propose innovative responses to 21st-century problems actively contributing to global conflict. Ricoeur's ability to draw from a diverse field of philosophers and theologians and to provide mediation to seemingly irreconcilable views often has both explicit and implicit practical application to socio-political questions. Here an international team of leading Ricoeur scholars develop cr…Read more
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105Technology and the Good LifeTechné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 15 (2): 82-95. 2011.This essay argues that a purely secular philosophy of technology omits an essential aspect of technical activity: the ultimate concern for which any action is undertaken. By way of an analysis of Borgmann and Hickman, I show that the philosophy of technology cannot articulate the nature of the good life without reference to an ultimacy beyond finite human goods. This paradoxically implies that human beings desire something infinite which they cannot name, a paradox that theologians have long und…Read more
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112Martin Heidegger , The Phenomenology of Religious Life, trans. by Matthias Frisch and Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei . Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 33 (2): 123-125. 2013.
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16East Asian Pedagogies (edited book)Springer. 2020.This book opens up philosophical spaces for comparative discussions of education across ‘East and West’. It develops an intercultural dialogue by exploring the Anglo-American traditions of educational trans-/formation and European constructions of Bildung, alongside East Asian traditions of trans-/formation and development. Comparatively little research has been done in this area, and many questions concerning the commensurability of North American, European and East Asian pedagogies remain. Des…Read more
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41Joint attention, the pedagogical relation, and pedagogical tact in the age of digital educationEthics and Education 19 (3): 391-407. 2024.This article aims to articulate the richness of the pedagogical relation and pedagogical tact in an age of the near ubiquitous presence of digital education. Drawing on Citton, we argue that there is an ecology of attentional influence that is pedagogically decisive. Our argument proceeds as follows: first, we introduce Citton’s theoretical frame; second, we examine the general conception of education that is established and articulated through the pedagogical relations between educator, student…Read more
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101Between horror and boredom: fairy tales and moral educationEthics and Education 15 (2): 213-231. 2020.Where do a child’s morals come from? Interactions with other human beings provide arguably the primary contexts for moral development: family, friends, teachers and other people. It is the artistic products of human activity that this essay considers: literature, film, art, music. Specifically, I will consider some philosophical issues concerning the influence of folk and fairy tales on moral development. I will discuss issues of representation and reduction: in particular, how far should storie…Read more
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26New perspectives in philosophy of education: ethics, politics and religion (edited book)Bloomsbury Academic. 2014.New Perspectives in Philosophy of Education seeks to build a bridge between philosophical reflection and socio-political action by developing a range of critical discussions in the areas of ethics, politics and religion. This volume brings together established authorities and a new generation of scholars to ask whether philosophy of education can contribute to political and social discourse, or whether it is destined to remain the marginal gadfly of mainstream ideology. The philosophy of educati…Read more
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90Heidegger East and West: Philosophy as Educative ContemplationJournal of Philosophy of Education 49 (2): 221-239. 2015.Resonances between Heidegger's philosophy and Eastern religious traditions have been widely discussed by scholars. The significance of Heidegger's thinking for education has also become increasingly clear over recent years. In this article I argue that an important aspect of Heidegger's work, the relevance of which to education is relatively undeveloped, relates to his desire to overcome Western metaphysics, a project that invites an exploration of his connections with Eastern thought. I argue t…Read more
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46Introduction: Love and Desire in EducationJournal of Philosophy of Education 53 (3): 457-459. 2019.
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53Languages of Love: The Formative Power of Religious LanguageJournal of Philosophy of Education 53 (3): 460-476. 2019.
University of Kent
PhD, 2006
Glasgow, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Education |
| Philosophy of Education, Misc |
| Philosophy of Religion |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Education |
| Philosophy of Education, Misc |
| Philosophy of Religion |