American schools are in a state of crisis.
At the root of our current perplexity, beneath the difficulties with funding, social problems, and low test scores, festers a serious uncertainty as to what the focus and goals of education should be. We are increasingly haunted by the suspicion that our educational theories and institutions have lost sight of the need to perpetuate a core of moral and civic knowledge that is essential for any citizen’s education, and indeed for any individual’s happiness. Mining the Founders’ rich reflections on education, the Pangles suggest, can help us recover a clearer sense of perspective and purpose.
With a commanding knowledge of the history of political philosophy, the authors illustrate how the Founders both drew upon and transformed the ideas of earlier philosophers of education such as Plato, Xenophon, Milton, Bacon, and Locke. They trace the emergence of a new American ideal of public education that puts civic instruction at its core to sustain a high quality of leadership and public discourse while producing resourceful, self-reliant members of a uniquely fluid society.
The Pangles also explore the wisdom and the weaknesses inherent in Jefferson’s attempt to create a comprehensive system of schooling that would educate parents and children and offer unprecedented freedom of choice to university students. An original closing section examines the Founders’ ideas for bringing all aspects of society to bear on education. It also shows how Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin presented their own lives as models for the education of others and analyzes the subtle, provocative moral philosophy implicit in the self-depiction of each.
The Learning of Liberty is historical and scholarly yet relentlessly practical, seeking from the Founders useful insights into the human soul and the character of good education. Even if the Founders do not provide us with ready-made solutions to many of our problems, the Pangles suggest, a study of their writings can give us a more realistic perspective, by teaching that our bewilderment is in some measure an outgrowth of unresolved tensions embedded in the Founders’ own conceptions of republicanism, religion, education, and human nature.
Open access edition funded by the National Endowment for Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface to the Kansas Open Books Edition
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: The Legacy
1. The Problematic Heritage of European Education
2. Classical Republican Educational Ideals
3. The Lockean Revolution in Education Theory
Part Two: Schools for the Emerging Republic
4. Benjamin Franklin and the Idea of a Distinctively American Academy
5. The American Insistence on Public Schooling as Essential to Democracy
6. Thomas Jefferson on the Education of Citizens and Leaders
7. The Unfulfilled Visions for a System of Public Schooling
8. Higher Education
Part Three: Institutions beyond the School
9. Religion
10. Economic and Political Life as Sources of Moral Education
11. Education through the Free Exchange of Ideas
Part Four: Education through Emulation
12. George Washington and the Principle of Honor
13. Thomas Jefferson and the Natural Basis of Moral Education
14. Benjamin Franklin and the Art of Virtue
Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Über den Autor
Thomas L. Pangle holds the Joe R. Long Endowed Chair in Democratic Studies in the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of more than a dozen books, including Justice Among Nations: On the Moral Basis of Power and Peace.Lorraine Smith Pangle is professor of government and Co-Director of the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Study of Core Texts and Ideas at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author or coauthor of four books, including Virtue Is Knowledge: The Moral Foundations of Socratic Political Philosophy.