The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia

While there is no recognised sub-discipline of 'the philosophy of higher education', there has been a steady flow of writings having just such an orientation, a flow that has increased in recent years. That flow has mainly taken two courses. On the one hand, those of a conservative persua...

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Main Author: Ronald Barnett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2004-02-01
Series:London Review of Education
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=38c8d0f8-9b12-44c2-ae02-7d62ee94c41a
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spelling doaj-36c33928e8084a68bf89ebfd9aeeef832020-12-16T09:43:37ZengUCL PressLondon Review of Education1474-84792004-02-0110.1080/1474846042000177483The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of AcademiaRonald BarnettWhile there is no recognised sub-discipline of 'the philosophy of higher education', there has been a steady flow of writings having just such an orientation, a flow that has increased in recent years. That flow has mainly taken two courses. On the one hand, those of a conservative persuasion hold to an ideal of higher education largely separate from society and find themselves, thereby, trying to identify any possible intellectual spaces in which universities may enjoy a position of being their own end. On the other hand, those of a post-modern persuasion convince themselves that no large purposes of their own can seriously be entertained by universities and that, therefore, only instrumental ends are available or that universities have simply to content themselves with their own form rather than their substance. Such a limited set of responses to the contemporary situation of universities is unnecessary. The very complexity of that situation, intermeshed as it is with the wider society, opens up new spaces and new universal challenges. It is possible for there to be a philosophical enterprise in relation to the university that also embraces large concerns and large future-oriented possibilities.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=38c8d0f8-9b12-44c2-ae02-7d62ee94c41a
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ronald Barnett
spellingShingle Ronald Barnett
The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia
London Review of Education
author_facet Ronald Barnett
author_sort Ronald Barnett
title The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia
title_short The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia
title_full The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia
title_fullStr The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia
title_full_unstemmed The Purposes of Higher Education and the Changing Face of Academia
title_sort purposes of higher education and the changing face of academia
publisher UCL Press
series London Review of Education
issn 1474-8479
publishDate 2004-02-01
description While there is no recognised sub-discipline of 'the philosophy of higher education', there has been a steady flow of writings having just such an orientation, a flow that has increased in recent years. That flow has mainly taken two courses. On the one hand, those of a conservative persuasion hold to an ideal of higher education largely separate from society and find themselves, thereby, trying to identify any possible intellectual spaces in which universities may enjoy a position of being their own end. On the other hand, those of a post-modern persuasion convince themselves that no large purposes of their own can seriously be entertained by universities and that, therefore, only instrumental ends are available or that universities have simply to content themselves with their own form rather than their substance. Such a limited set of responses to the contemporary situation of universities is unnecessary. The very complexity of that situation, intermeshed as it is with the wider society, opens up new spaces and new universal challenges. It is possible for there to be a philosophical enterprise in relation to the university that also embraces large concerns and large future-oriented possibilities.
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