Essays on religion and education
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Essays on religion and education
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1992
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
R. M. Hare is one of the most widely discussed of today's moral philosophers. In this volume he has collected his most important essays in the related fields of religion and education, some newly published and others now inaccessible. The book starts with an exposition of his ideas on the meaning of religious language. There follow several essays, theoretical and practical, on the relations between religion and morality, which have deep implications for moral
education. The central question addressed in the rest of the volume is how children can be educated to think for themselves, freely but rationally, about moral questions, and the effects on society of failure to achieve this. Professor Hare argues that those who want to dispense with morality are in
effect resigning from a vital educational task. Attitudes to euthanasia and to equality of educational opportunity are taken as examples of how our thinking can go wrong.
Table of Contents
- 1. The Simple Believer
- Appendix: Theology and Falsification
- 2. Religion and Morals
- 3. Are there Moral Authorities?
- 4. Euthanasia: A Christian View
- 5. How did Morality Get a Bad Name?
- 6. Satanism and Nihilism
- 7. Adolescents into Adults
- 8. Autonomy as an Educational Ideal
- 9. Value Education in a Pluralist Society
- 10. Language and Moral Education
- Appendix: Rejoinder to G. J. Warnock
- 11. Platonism in Moral Education: Two Varieties
- 12. Why Moral Language?
- 13. Opportunity for What? Some Remarks on Current Disputes about Equality in Education
- References and Bibliography
- Index
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