Educating poles: What philosophy do we need and does it have to be grounded in religion? A historic analytical perspective

The article poses a thesis that the distinctive features of Polish philosophical and social thought are educational criticism, practicalism, activism, elitist egalitarianism, as well as religiousness. What is more, Polish philosophy focuses on man and his journey to perfection. The article stresses...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Przegla̜d religioznawczy
Main Author: Kojkoł, Jerzy 1960- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Polskie Towarzyrtwo Religioznawcze 2019
In: Przegla̜d religioznawczy
Year: 2019, Issue: 1/271
Further subjects:B Education
B Polish philosophy
B Religion
B Nation (university)
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Description
Summary:The article poses a thesis that the distinctive features of Polish philosophical and social thought are educational criticism, practicalism, activism, elitist egalitarianism, as well as religiousness. What is more, Polish philosophy focuses on man and his journey to perfection. The article stresses the importance, or even necessity, of developing Polish philosophy, which should be done in a European context. The author of the article believes that Polish philosophy may provide a humanistic basis for educating Poles. He supports his ideas with selected approaches to Polish philosophy from the early 20th century.
ISSN:2658-1531
Contains:Enthalten in: Przegla̜d religioznawczy