The papers of this volume were presented at the 19th Conference of the International Association of Greek Philosophy which was held on the island of Samos on the topic of Paideia. As in the past, participants had the opportunity to spend a week in leisure, or as the ancients would have said in schole, where they engaged as friends in dialogue between men and women, teachers and students, artists and professionals, from all corners of the world. In this way the presentations were but only a part of a larger intellectual and spiritual environment that had evolved through the common search for wisdom on this most significant topic of our era. Amongst the participants was a common sense that what passes for education in our rapidly changing world is grossly inadequate for preparing any part of the world's populations for solving the very problems that our consumer societies are generating in all facets of existence, from biological, political, to spiritual. There was a shared sense of crisis and a sense that the very activity of shaping a common logos might itself be a contribution to understanding how the concept of paideia may again gain a presence in this difficult time. What is unique in the present volumes is the open range of inquiry which is reflected in the diversity of fields, cultures and interests of the participants. This allowed participants to address a wide range of issues with differing emphases but through the unifying concept of paideia which takes the molding of the entirety of human nature¯not simply that sliver that has utility¯into account. Thus the present collection of articles is not held together by any dogma, bias, or special claim to rightness, be it of a national, religious, scientific or academic nature, but by the locus of the unifying concept of paideia and its correlate, the sanctity of human nature.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. | INTRODUCTION BY KOSTAS KALIMTZIS | 9 | |
2. | ANTONIS COUMOUNDOUROS & RONALD POLANSKY | PROGRESS IN PRACTICAL THINKING? | 19 |
3. | JOSE CARLOS AVELINO DA SILVA | DIALECTICS AND EDUCATION | 36 |
4. | ANDREW DOMANSKI | PAIDEIA AND PLATO'S SYSTEM OF EARLY EDUCATION | 46 |
5. | THOMAS L. DYNNESON | THE PAIDEIA OF GLOBAL CIVISM | 56 |
6. | CHRISTOS EVANGELIOU | PLATO'S CRITIQUE OF THE HOMERIC PAIDEIA: IN SEARCH FOR A NEW PEDAGOGIC PARADIGM | 65 |
7. | PAUL GAFFNEY | DEEP AND WIDE: THE MEASURE OF EDUCATION | 94 |
8. | NEIL O. HOUSER | PROBLEM-POSING IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A FREIRIAN APPROACH | 102 |
9. | FILIP IVANOVIC | EDUCATION IN BYZANTINE EMPIRE | 112 |
10. | VALENTIN KALAN | ON THE CONTEMPORARY RELEVANCE OF GREEK PAIDEIA FOR THE CONCEPT OF A BALANCED EDUCATION: ARISTOTLE, NIETZSCHE, CAMUS AND ARENDT | 122 |
11. | VASILIKI KARAVAKOU | THE IMPORTANCE OF CULTURAL AND UNIVERSAL IDEALS IN MODERN EDUCATION | 140 |
12. | STEPHANIE MACKLER | SPIRITUAL EXERCISES FOR THE GLOBAL ERA: FROM THE POSITIVIST TO THE HERMENEUTIC UNIVERSITY | 155 |
13. | JOSEP MONSERRAT-MOLAS & ÕNGEL PASCUAL-MARTIN | "HIPPOCRATES AT THE CROSSROADS" EAGER FOR PAIDEIA | 168 |
14. | SEAMUS MULRYAN | DIALOGICAL HERMENEUTICS OF FACTICITY: AN EDUCATION FOR THE GLOBAL ERA | 185 |
15. | AKBAR RAHNAMA | RETURN TO PAIDEIA AS A BASIC EDUCATIONAL NEED IN THE ERA OF GLOBALISATION | 197 |
16. | THOMAS M. ROBINSON | PLATO'S FINAL THOUGHTS ON EDUCATION | 202 |
17. | SCOTT RUBARTH | BREAKING THROUGH THE NOISE: CLASSICAL PHILOSOPHY IN AN AGE OF INFORMATION OVERLOAD | 211 |
18. | HEMANT SHAH | EDUCATION OF THE FUTURE | 219 |
19. | GEORGINA TSOLIDIS | PAIDEIA, VALUES AND MULTICULTURALISM | 229 |
20. | JOANNE WAUGH & DAVID GARRISON | PAIDEIA BEFORE PHILOSOPHY: THE ÓOÖIH OF XENOPHANES | 238 |
21. | JOHN R. WOLFE | THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PAIDEIA IN PLATO'S TIMAEUS | 250 |
22. | HIDEYA YAMAKAWA | COSMOPOLITAN PAIDEIA | 260 |
INDEX OF NAMES | 270 |