Study of Philosophical Fundamentals of Interdisciplinary Curricula in Higher Education of “Forms of Knowledge” as seen by Analytical Philosophers

Curriculum has been a matter of interest to analytical philosophers; Hurst maintains that teaching is by nature an activity which may assume many forms. Analytical philosophers believe that educational and curriculum planning is done in a wrong way and the only logical reason for many educational pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohammad Hassan Mirza-Mohammadi, Ali Sohbatlou
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Iranian Institute for Social and Cultural Studies 2009-06-01
Series:Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.isih.ir/article_7_cbf4d6256d6ac8e0c2e7e7c573a9d2f9.pdf
Description
Summary:Curriculum has been a matter of interest to analytical philosophers; Hurst maintains that teaching is by nature an activity which may assume many forms. Analytical philosophers believe that educational and curriculum planning is done in a wrong way and the only logical reason for many educational programs is their cultural orientation. Presumptions about knowledge, forms of knowledge and internal relations among them should be taken into consideration. Analytical philosophers maintain that more attention should be paid to philosophical aspects and people should be encouraged to work more in this regard. This issue has been discussed in educational philosophy of London school of thought and by great philosophers of that school, especially Hurst, by delineating “forms of knowledge” theory. Hurst has classified forms of knowledge and while rejecting unity of knowledge, has paid attention to its very forms. He believes that human knowledge has forms which are logical distinct from one another, He mentions mathematics, Physics, human sciences, history, religious sciences, literature, fine arts, and philosophy as seven forms of knowledge. The present paper aims to review philosophical fundaments of interdisciplinary curricula in higher education of forms of knowledge” as seen by analytical philosophers through documentary analytical methods.
ISSN:2008-4641
2008-4846