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It may be surprising that the thought of a medieval theologian still informs many areas of intellectual debate, but there continues to be lively interest in the work of Thomas Aquinas. He considers the most radical questions for our thinking about education: what is a human being? what does it mean to learn? what does it mean to teach? what does it mean to know, to understand, and to search for the truth? In this text, Vivian Boland offers a short biography of Aquinas focused on his personal experiences as a student and teacher. The book then provides a critical exposition of the texts in…mehr
It may be surprising that the thought of a medieval theologian still informs many areas of intellectual debate, but there continues to be lively interest in the work of Thomas Aquinas. He considers the most radical questions for our thinking about education: what is a human being? what does it mean to learn? what does it mean to teach? what does it mean to know, to understand, and to search for the truth? In this text, Vivian Boland offers a short biography of Aquinas focused on his personal experiences as a student and teacher. The book then provides a critical exposition of the texts in which Aquinas develops his views about education and includes a short account of the reception and influence of his thinking. Finally, it considers in some detail the most significant points of contact between Aquinas's educational thought and current concerns - his conviction about the goodness of the world, his holistic understanding of human experience and his contributions to virtue theory - and highlights the continuing relevance and influence of this work and thinking within educational philosophy today.
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Autorenporträt
Vivian Boland OP is professor aggregatus in the Faculty of Theology at the Angelicum University in Rome. He taught at St Mary's University, Twickenham, and at Blackfriars Hall, Oxford and is author and editor of several books, including StThomas Aquinas in the Bloomsbury Library of Educational Thought (2014).
Inhaltsangabe
Series Editor's Preface Foreword Introduction Part I: An Intellectual Biography of Thomas Aquinas 1. Learning: Monte Cassino, Naples, Paris, and Cologne 2. Teaching: Paris, Naples, Orvieto, and Rome 3. Reading, Disputing, Repeating 4. Sources and Resources 5. Openness and Criticism 6. Thomas Opts for the Dominicans and for Aristotle Part II: Critical Exposition of Aquinas's Work II (A): Can One Human Being Teach Another? 7. Thomas on Teaching: Contexts 8. Thomas on Teaching: In II Sentences 9 and 28 9. Thomas on Teaching: Quaestiones disputatae de veritate 11 10. Thomas on Teaching: Summa theologiae I 117 II (B): Knowledge, Truth, Faith Reason 11. Knowledge 12. Truth 13. Faith and Reason, Theology and Philosophy II (C): Pedagogy 14. Towards a 'Sound Educational Method': In Boethii de Trinitate 5-6 15. Kinds of Speculative Sciences 16. Method in the Speculative Sciences 17. From Sensation and Imagination to Understanding and Wisdom 18. The Roots of Aquinas's Pedagogical Concern: Scholastic, Aristotelian, Christian 19. From Socrates to Jesus 20. The Most Excellent of Teachers Part III: The Reception and Influence of Aquinas's Work 21. From Controversial Theologian to Doctor of the Church 22. The Second Scholasticism 23. The Third Scholasticism 24. The Twentieth Century 25. Thomists on Education in the Twentieth Century 26. Interpreting Aquinas Today Part IV: The Relevance of Aquinas's Work Today IV (A): Creation 27. The Meaning of Creation 28. The Goodness of Creation 29. God's Complete Freedom IV (B): The Human Being 30. Aquinas Opts for a 'Holistic Anthropology' 31. The Unity and Integrity of the Human Being 32. Praise of the Body 33. The Image of God IV (C): On Virtue 34. Virtue Theory 35. Dispositions 36. Shaping Character, Strengthening Dispositions IV (D): On Virtues 37. Intellectual and Moral Virtues 38. Cardinal Virtues: Pieper and Geach 39. Contemporary Receptions of Aquinas on Virtue: Hauerwas and MacIntyre 40. Criticisms of Virtue Theory 41. Virtues for Learning and Teaching 42. Human Flourishing: Action, Contemplation, and Teaching Bibliography Index of Persons and Subjects
Series Editor's Preface Foreword Introduction Part I: An Intellectual Biography of Thomas Aquinas 1. Learning: Monte Cassino, Naples, Paris, and Cologne 2. Teaching: Paris, Naples, Orvieto, and Rome 3. Reading, Disputing, Repeating 4. Sources and Resources 5. Openness and Criticism 6. Thomas Opts for the Dominicans and for Aristotle Part II: Critical Exposition of Aquinas's Work II (A): Can One Human Being Teach Another? 7. Thomas on Teaching: Contexts 8. Thomas on Teaching: In II Sentences 9 and 28 9. Thomas on Teaching: Quaestiones disputatae de veritate 11 10. Thomas on Teaching: Summa theologiae I 117 II (B): Knowledge, Truth, Faith Reason 11. Knowledge 12. Truth 13. Faith and Reason, Theology and Philosophy II (C): Pedagogy 14. Towards a 'Sound Educational Method': In Boethii de Trinitate 5-6 15. Kinds of Speculative Sciences 16. Method in the Speculative Sciences 17. From Sensation and Imagination to Understanding and Wisdom 18. The Roots of Aquinas's Pedagogical Concern: Scholastic, Aristotelian, Christian 19. From Socrates to Jesus 20. The Most Excellent of Teachers Part III: The Reception and Influence of Aquinas's Work 21. From Controversial Theologian to Doctor of the Church 22. The Second Scholasticism 23. The Third Scholasticism 24. The Twentieth Century 25. Thomists on Education in the Twentieth Century 26. Interpreting Aquinas Today Part IV: The Relevance of Aquinas's Work Today IV (A): Creation 27. The Meaning of Creation 28. The Goodness of Creation 29. God's Complete Freedom IV (B): The Human Being 30. Aquinas Opts for a 'Holistic Anthropology' 31. The Unity and Integrity of the Human Being 32. Praise of the Body 33. The Image of God IV (C): On Virtue 34. Virtue Theory 35. Dispositions 36. Shaping Character, Strengthening Dispositions IV (D): On Virtues 37. Intellectual and Moral Virtues 38. Cardinal Virtues: Pieper and Geach 39. Contemporary Receptions of Aquinas on Virtue: Hauerwas and MacIntyre 40. Criticisms of Virtue Theory 41. Virtues for Learning and Teaching 42. Human Flourishing: Action, Contemplation, and Teaching Bibliography Index of Persons and Subjects
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