Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy

This article aims to shed light on the interconnectedness between two important projects in applied philosophy: (a) Philosophy for Children (P4C), a movement for the introduction of philosophy in schools, and (b) Logic-based Therapy and Consultation (LBTC), a widely developed form of philosophical c...

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Main Author: Christos Georgakakis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Birmingham Library Services 2021-08-01
Series:Journal of Philosophy in Schools
Online Access:https://jps.bham.ac.uk/articles/135
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spelling doaj-d5bbd463057149b2bc252c253d7f53322021-09-13T08:30:40ZengUniversity of Birmingham Library ServicesJournal of Philosophy in Schools2204-24822021-08-01815370121Philosophy for children and logic-based therapyChristos Georgakakis0University of AberdeenThis article aims to shed light on the interconnectedness between two important projects in applied philosophy: (a) Philosophy for Children (P4C), a movement for the introduction of philosophy in schools, and (b) Logic-based Therapy and Consultation (LBTC), a widely developed form of philosophical counselling. More specifically, it attempts to show how Michael Hand’s (2018) argument in favour of P4C can fruitfully be enhanced by the endorsement of fundamental theoretical assumptions of Elliot Cohen’s (2005, 2019) LBTC. Hand argues that philosophy should be taught in schools as a mandatory subject by virtue of its distinctive educational value, namely its ability to contribute to justifying subscription to moral, political and religious standards. In turn, proponents of LBTC presuppose the distinctive capability of philosophy to assess and direct subscription to emotional standards, as well as to a broader category of standards, the practical ones. Given that subscribing to all those types of standards is of utmost importance for human life, an argument for mandatorily introducing philosophy in the school curricula starts taking a more concrete shape.https://jps.bham.ac.uk/articles/135
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christos Georgakakis
spellingShingle Christos Georgakakis
Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
Journal of Philosophy in Schools
author_facet Christos Georgakakis
author_sort Christos Georgakakis
title Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
title_short Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
title_full Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
title_fullStr Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
title_full_unstemmed Philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
title_sort philosophy for children and logic-based therapy
publisher University of Birmingham Library Services
series Journal of Philosophy in Schools
issn 2204-2482
publishDate 2021-08-01
description This article aims to shed light on the interconnectedness between two important projects in applied philosophy: (a) Philosophy for Children (P4C), a movement for the introduction of philosophy in schools, and (b) Logic-based Therapy and Consultation (LBTC), a widely developed form of philosophical counselling. More specifically, it attempts to show how Michael Hand’s (2018) argument in favour of P4C can fruitfully be enhanced by the endorsement of fundamental theoretical assumptions of Elliot Cohen’s (2005, 2019) LBTC. Hand argues that philosophy should be taught in schools as a mandatory subject by virtue of its distinctive educational value, namely its ability to contribute to justifying subscription to moral, political and religious standards. In turn, proponents of LBTC presuppose the distinctive capability of philosophy to assess and direct subscription to emotional standards, as well as to a broader category of standards, the practical ones. Given that subscribing to all those types of standards is of utmost importance for human life, an argument for mandatorily introducing philosophy in the school curricula starts taking a more concrete shape.
url https://jps.bham.ac.uk/articles/135
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