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(2014) A companion to research in education, Dordrecht, Springer.

Education, science and the lifeworld

a response to "education is the new philosophy"

Norm Friesen

pp. 117-120

Kalantzis and Cope set for themselves an ambitious and (in part) commendable task in "Education is the New Philosophy:" to re-think the disciplinary underpinnings of education, and to elevate it from an applied sub-discipline to an undertaking on par with "big science ." This chapter explains why a re-thinking of education and its disciplinary positioning is valuable, but it also takes issue with the unqualified reach of Kalantzis and Cope's argument. To aver that education is an originary science and science for all sciences, is to take the current move to the "sciences" in educational discourse (learning sciences, brain sciences, et cetera) to a level not known in the Western tradition since the optimism of the enlightenment of the eighteenth century. My response concludes by making the case that education is less of a "positive," unifying metadisciplinary enterprise than it is an engagement with negativity, in its dialectical sense – with that which is not, not yet and not known.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-6809-3_14

Full citation:

Friesen, N. (2014)., Education, science and the lifeworld: a response to "education is the new philosophy", in A. D. reid, E. Paul hart & M. A. Peters (eds.), A companion to research in education, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 117-120.

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