Kant Advocate of Public Education and of Learning by Doing "Above All Things, Obedience Is An Essential Feature in The Character of A Child "
Kant Advocate of Public Education and of Learning by Doing "Above All Things, Obedience Is An Essential Feature in The Character of A Child "
Kant Advocate of Public Education and of Learning by Doing "Above All Things, Obedience Is An Essential Feature in The Character of A Child "
They never lived at the same time, but history always put Locke and Kant on a dust up.
A famed German thinker, Kant (1724–1804) was an advocate of public education and of learning
by doing, a process we call training. As he reasons that these are two vastly different things.
He postulated “Above all things, obedience is an essential feature in the character of a child…”.
As opposed to Locke, he surmises that children should always obey and learn the virtue of duty,
because children’s inclination to earn or do something is something unreliable. And
transgressions should always be dealt with punishment, thus enforcing obedience.
Also, he theorized that man, naturally, has a radical evil in their nature. And learning and duty
can erase this.
Adler (1902- 2001) was an American philosopher and educator, and a proponent of
Educational Perennialism. He believed that one should teach the things that one
deems to be of perpetual importance. He proposed that one should teach principles,
not facts, since details of facts change constantly. And since people are humans, one
should teach them about humans also, not about machines, or theories.
He argues that one should validate the reasoning with the primary descriptions of
popular experiments. This provides students with a human side to the scientific
discipline, and demonstrates the reasoning in deed.
This means that no observation is completely objective. As the mind of the observer
and the act of observing will simply just affect the outcome of the observation.