Looking for the Ethical Self in Others: Relationality, Self-Knowing, and Education
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v48i3.44238Résumé
This paper seeks implications of human relationality and ethical subjectivity for education. Embracing relationality as ontologically basic, as well as the basis of self-knowing, has ethical implications for educators' self-knowledge and their communities. Focusing on ethics as relational draws the condition of living in and among a community of others to the foreground and refuses to resolve tensions based on universal and absolute principles. As educators assume responsibility within their communities and for students, they find themselves within an unsolvable predicament of partial self-knowing. However, through engagement with others they press against the limits of self knowledge and risk themselves in caring for others. In the process, they uncover their vulnerability to the "Other" as a resource for an ethic of leadership and education.
Téléchargements
Publié-e
Numéro
Rubrique
Licence
The Journal of Educational Thought retains first publication rights for all articles. The Journal grants reproduction rights for noncommercial educational purposes with the provision that full acknowledgement of the work’s source be noted on each copy. The Journal will redirect to the appropriate authors any inquiries for further commercial publication of individual articles. All authors wishing to publish in JET will be asked to fill in and sign a Consent to Publish and Transfer of Copyright agreement.
Authors must affirm that any submission to JET has not been and will not be published or submitted elsewhere while under considration by JET.