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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

The Inquiry of Care

Peter Nelsen

Department of Leadership and Educational Studies, Appalachian State University

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First published: 20 August 2013
Cited by: 3

Abstract

While discussions of the moral dimensions of the caring relation and their implications for teaching and learning are well developed within the literature, there has not been much analysis of the place of inquiry within our understanding of caring and the education inspired by it. Previous discussions offer important insight into what care‐inspired education might entail, but they do not address how inquiry itself may be enhanced by an ethic of care. After arguing that we should consider reason to be more central to the caring relation than has been previously recognized, Peter Nelsen seeks to ameliorate the apparent rift between reason and the affective dimensions of caring through what John Dewey described as the body‐mind. According to this view, reason and affect are inseparable aspects of the process of inquiry; they are both always present in our caring encounters. Nelsen then explores the educational implications of envisioning the caring relation as body‐mind grounded inquiry.

Number of times cited: 3

  • , A Reflective Account on Dimensions of Caring: Moments of Care Within Journal Editorship, Doctoral Supervision, and Deanship, Towards a Philosophy of Caring in Higher Education, 10.1007/978-3-030-03961-5_11, (97-111), (2018).
  • , Getting to Know Your Students and an Educational Ethic of Care, Journal of Management Education, 41, 5, (669), (2017).
  • , Why there is no education ethics without principles, Educational Philosophy and Theory, 49, 3, (284), (2017).