Montclair, New Jersey, United States of America
  •  52
    Community of Infancy: Suspending the Sovereignty of the Teacher's Voice
    with Tyson E. Lewis
    Journal of Philosophy of Education 50 (4): 538-553. 2016.
    While some argue that the only way to make a place for Philosophy for Children in today's strict, standardised classroom is to measure its efficacy in promoting reasoning, we believe that this must be avoided in order to safeguard what is truly unique in P4C dialogue. When P4C acquiesces to the very same quantitative measures that define the rest of learning, then the philosophical dimension drops out and P4C becomes yet another progressive curriculum and pedagogy for enhancing argumentation ski…Read more
  •  32
    Habermas, Critical Theory and Education – By M. Murphy & T. Fleming
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (8): 901-903. 2011.
  •  30
    The Educational Community as In-tentional Community
    with Tyson E. Lewis
    Studies in Philosophy and Education 35 (4): 371-383. 2015.
    This paper reassesses a perennial concern of philosophy of education: the nature of the educational community and the role of the teacher in relation to such a community. As an entry point into this broader question, we turn to Philosophy for children, which has consistently emphasized the importance of community. Yet, not unlike pragmatist notions of community more broadly, the P4C community has largely focused on the goal-directed, purposive, aspect of the process of inquiry. The purpose of ou…Read more
  •  16
    Potentialism and the experience of the new
    Ethics and Education 11 (3): 352-358. 2016.
    In this paper, I argue that potentialism is uniquely able to articulate the value of educational practices that lack the kind of directionality commonly associated with educational activities. It does so by operating with radically different assumptions about the nature and value of education – assumptions that can be derived from the basic premise of progressive education that education needs to be rooted in experience. I follow here a line of thought that leads from Dewey’s notion of experienc…Read more
  •  9
    ‘Trust me, I do not know what I am talking about!’: The voice of the teacher beyond the oath and blasphemy
    with Tyson E. Lewis
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (1): 47-57. 2017.
    Educational theorists ranging from Ivan Illich to Jan Masschelein and Maarten Simons have described institutionalized schooling as a modernized, secular church, full of rituals, sacraments, and various incantations. For them, the function of the teacher as priest and schooling as baptism is highly problematic, separating education from the common world. As such, the educational theology of the school needs to be suspended in order for educational life to take on new meaning beyond the sacraments…Read more
  •  8
    Response to the Review Symposium of Giorgio Agamben: Education without Ends (review)
    Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (2): 233-237. 2020.
  •  3
    Response to Critic
    with Tyson E. Lewis
    Studies in Philosophy and Education 42 (3): 347-349. 2023.
  •  1
    Italian critical theorist Giorgio Agamben may be best known for his political writings concerning the curtailing of privacy rights in the wake of 9/11 and the status of prisoners of war and refugees. Yet, casting him primarily as a political theorist is misleading given his significant contributions to the fields of linguistics, literary theory, philosophy, aesthetics, and religious studies. This book provides the first ever comprehensive introduction to Agamben’s work as it pertains to the fiel…Read more