Education and ideals. On the supreme values in liberal democracy
Streszczenie
Together with the collapse of the communist regime in Poland, the question
about a new way of organizing social life arose. Almost the entire political
class has opted for a return to the pattern of a liberal democracy. Under
the new system, a number of important issues had to be tackled, including
the question of the supreme values or ideals presented to students by state
schools, including those of higher education. The author notes that putting
forward these ideals results from the fact of handing down to the younger
generation what in the development of society so far has proved to be most
valuable. A model of such education was proposed in the 1960s by the British
philosopher of education Richard S. Peters. Since societies develop, their
ideals change as well. On the basis of the example of the last hundred and
fifty years of development of the Anglo-Saxon culture, the author shows the
tension between the two ideals of civil society organization, the first coming
from John Stewart Mill and other from John Rawls. Understanding what is
most valuable in social life must be reflected in the content and forms used
by public education. This is what seems to be the key justification of the need
to communicate values and ideals to pupils and students by schools and universities.
Concluding, the author poses a number of important questions regarding
the specific understanding of a liberal democracy by states such as
Poland, which are returning to this economic and political system after decades
of enslavement.
Collections
- Książki, rozdziały [942]