Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens
The problem of this study was to determine to what extent contemporary adult education theory has similarities to and origins in ancient Athenian ideas about education. The methodology used in the study combined hermeneutics and the critical theory of Jurgen Habermas. Primary sources incuded Aristot...
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North Texas State University
1986
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ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc3307072020-07-15T07:09:31Z Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens Hancock, Donald H. (Donald Hugh) adult education education theory athenian culture Adult education -- History. Adult education|zGreece -- Athens. Education -- Philosophy. The problem of this study was to determine to what extent contemporary adult education theory has similarities to and origins in ancient Athenian ideas about education. The methodology used in the study combined hermeneutics and the critical theory of Jurgen Habermas. Primary sources incuded Aristotle, Plato, Aristophanes, and Diogenes Laertius; secondary sources included Jaeger, Marrou, Dover, and Kennedy. In the analysis of Athenian adult education, three groups of adult educators were identified—the poets the sophists, and the philosophers. The poets were the traditional educators of the Greek people; their shared interest or way of perceiving the world emphasized the importance of community cohesion and health. In Athens in the mid-fifth century B.C., a new group of educators, the sophists, arose to fill a demand of adults for higher and adult education in the skills necessary to participate in the assembly and courts. The sophists emphasized a pragmatic human interest and taught the skill of rhetoric. Socrates and Plato created a new school of educators, the philosophers, who became vigorous ideological opponents of both the poets and the sophists. The philosophers exhibited a transcendental interest or approach to knowledge; the purpose of life was to improve the soul, and the preferred way of life was contemplative rather than active. The philosophers taught the skill of dialectic. Paideia was a Greek word that originally referred to childhood education but which came to mean education throughout the lifespan and the civic culture that supported education. Athenian citizens perceived their paideia to be among their greatest virtues, an attainment which could not be lost to the fortunes of time as could wealth or position. Modern adult education lacks the concern for the communal and transcendental human interests that were important to many ancient Greeks. Modern cultures tend to promote strong individuation of personality and to idealize pragmatic and individualistic concerns. Researchers in the field of adult education often assign to human nature the pragmatic and individualistic qualities of adult learners, but fail to recognize how these features reflect ideologies peculiar to modern American society. North Texas State University Newsom, Ron Cooper, Jed Arthur Pearson, Jim Berry 1986-12 Thesis or Dissertation v, 199 leaves Text local-cont-no: 1002715640-Hancock call-no: 379 N81d no.2582 untcat: b1377282 oclc: 16503200 https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc330707/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc330707 English Public Hancock, Donald H. (Donald Hugh) Copyright Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved. |
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adult education education theory athenian culture Adult education -- History. Adult education|zGreece -- Athens. Education -- Philosophy. |
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adult education education theory athenian culture Adult education -- History. Adult education|zGreece -- Athens. Education -- Philosophy. Hancock, Donald H. (Donald Hugh) Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens |
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The problem of this study was to determine to what extent contemporary adult education theory has similarities to and origins in ancient Athenian ideas about education. The methodology used in the study combined hermeneutics and the critical theory of Jurgen Habermas. Primary sources incuded Aristotle, Plato, Aristophanes, and Diogenes Laertius; secondary sources included Jaeger, Marrou, Dover, and Kennedy. In the analysis of Athenian adult education, three groups of adult educators were identified—the poets the sophists, and the philosophers. The poets were the traditional educators of the Greek people; their shared interest or way of perceiving the world emphasized the importance of community cohesion and health. In Athens in the mid-fifth century B.C., a new group of educators, the sophists, arose to fill a demand of adults for higher and adult education in the skills necessary to participate in the assembly and courts. The sophists emphasized a pragmatic human interest and taught the skill of rhetoric. Socrates and Plato created a new school of educators, the philosophers, who became vigorous ideological opponents of both the poets and the sophists. The philosophers exhibited a transcendental interest or approach to knowledge; the purpose of life was to improve the soul, and the preferred way of life was contemplative rather than active. The philosophers taught the skill of dialectic. Paideia was a Greek word that originally referred to childhood education but which came to mean education throughout the lifespan and the civic culture that supported education. Athenian citizens perceived their paideia to be among their greatest virtues, an attainment which could not be lost to the fortunes of time as could wealth or position. Modern adult education lacks the concern for the communal and transcendental human interests that were important to many ancient Greeks. Modern cultures tend to promote strong individuation of personality and to idealize pragmatic and individualistic concerns. Researchers in the field of adult education often assign to human nature the pragmatic and individualistic qualities of adult learners, but fail to recognize how these features reflect ideologies peculiar to modern American society. |
author2 |
Newsom, Ron |
author_facet |
Newsom, Ron Hancock, Donald H. (Donald Hugh) |
author |
Hancock, Donald H. (Donald Hugh) |
author_sort |
Hancock, Donald H. (Donald Hugh) |
title |
Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens |
title_short |
Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens |
title_full |
Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens |
title_fullStr |
Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens |
title_full_unstemmed |
Ideas About Adult Learning in Fifth and Fourth Century B.C. Athens |
title_sort |
ideas about adult learning in fifth and fourth century b.c. athens |
publisher |
North Texas State University |
publishDate |
1986 |
url |
https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc330707/ |
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AT hancockdonaldhdonaldhugh ideasaboutadultlearninginfifthandfourthcenturybcathens |
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1719328544358662144 |