The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Education as the Cultivation of Second Nature: Two Senses of the Given

Koichiro Misawa

School of Education, Tokyo University of Social Welfare, Japan

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 03 April 2013
Cited by: 2

Abstract

In philosophy, it is almost a platitude to argue that fact and value intertwine. However, in empirically oriented educational research, it is not. Hence, there is some affinity between logical positivism, which is no longer tenable in philosophy, and empirically based contemporary educational research in terms of assumptions each makes about “the given.” In this essay, Koichiro Misawa casts light on how fact and value intertwine by invoking the notion of “second nature” that John McDowell has reanimated. This will in turn prompt us to see the relation between nature and nurture, as well as between mind and world, quite differently and to discern two senses of “the given”: one is illusory; the other educational. Misawa concludes that the philosophy of education should and can take the lead in forming rigorous interdisciplinary studies of the human future with a certain sensitivity to the tight and complex interweaving between the empirical and the conceptual, or between the factual and the normative.

Number of times cited: 2

  • , Humans, Animals and the World We Inhabit—On and Beyond the Symposium ‘Second Nature, Bildung and McDowell: David Bakhurst's The Formation of Reason’, Journal of Philosophy of Education, 51, 4, (744-759), (2017).
  • , To mould or to bring out? Human nature, anthropology and educational utopianism, Ethics and Education, 9, 2, (157), (2014).