TY - JOUR
T1 - Countering the Vices
T2 - On the Neglected Side of Character Education
AU - Gilead, Tal
PY - 2011/5
Y1 - 2011/5
N2 - Following the rise of virtue and character education, educational philosophers have recently given much attention to questions relating to virtue and the good. This, however, has not been paralleled by a similar interest in vice and evil, which, in this context, are examined only rarely. In this article, I use the work of the American philosopher John Kekes as a backdrop for discussing the role coping with vice and evil should play in virtue and character education. I show how Kekes' assumptions that people have natural inclinations towards both virtue and vice and that evil and vice are an inevitable part of human existence lead to the idea that character education should explicitly discuss not only the virtues but also the vices, that it should promote self-control and that it should bring people to recognize that they have mixed moral inclinations. I then argue that even if we reject Kekes' key assumptions, embracing these three ideas that attempt to provide means to counter the vices might still have marked benefits for character education. The article concludes by suggesting that while the ideas that stem from Kekes' approach should not necessarily be embraced, the themes that they raise call for greater consideration and further analysis.
AB - Following the rise of virtue and character education, educational philosophers have recently given much attention to questions relating to virtue and the good. This, however, has not been paralleled by a similar interest in vice and evil, which, in this context, are examined only rarely. In this article, I use the work of the American philosopher John Kekes as a backdrop for discussing the role coping with vice and evil should play in virtue and character education. I show how Kekes' assumptions that people have natural inclinations towards both virtue and vice and that evil and vice are an inevitable part of human existence lead to the idea that character education should explicitly discuss not only the virtues but also the vices, that it should promote self-control and that it should bring people to recognize that they have mixed moral inclinations. I then argue that even if we reject Kekes' key assumptions, embracing these three ideas that attempt to provide means to counter the vices might still have marked benefits for character education. The article concludes by suggesting that while the ideas that stem from Kekes' approach should not necessarily be embraced, the themes that they raise call for greater consideration and further analysis.
KW - Character
KW - Evil
KW - Kekes
KW - Moral education
KW - Vice
KW - Virtue
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79953710825&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11217-011-9223-1
DO - 10.1007/s11217-011-9223-1
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AN - SCOPUS:79953710825
SN - 0039-3746
VL - 30
SP - 271
EP - 284
JO - Studies in Philosophy and Education
JF - Studies in Philosophy and Education
IS - 3
ER -