Curricular Planning for Sociocultural Change and Development: A Critique
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v13i3.43797Abstract
Curricular planning for sociocultural development rests upon dubious ethnocentric assumptions respecting the superiority of the modern. Analysis shows that a society's capacity for controlling and directing its own inherent propensity for change and/or stability is profoundly conditioned by the phenomenological form experientially assumed by the basic epistemological categories of time, space, causation, number, ethics, and aesthetics. For a variety of logical and functional reasons, therefore, continuing validity must everywhere be accorded to many
traditional practices.
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