The Concept of ‘intelligence’ In John Deweyapos;s Philosophy And Educational Theory

Educational Theory 19 (2):185-195 (1969)
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Abstract

The paper analyzes dewey's two different philosophical accounts of intelligence, one as a method of adjustment within given situations, and the other as creative of new ends and means for the realization of those ends. it also points out that these two accounts of intelligence are not mutually exclusive; and we have in their combination a parallel with scientific method, in which resolution of a specific problem requires imaginative theorizing. it is also shown that dewey's concept of 'intelligence' requires the formation of certain intellectual and moral dispositions, and that reflection can become enlightened striving only when it is sustained and guided by those dispositions

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Citations of this work

Justice and the family.Francis Schrag - 1976 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 19 (1-4):193 – 208.
Articles.Steven E. Tozer, Debra Miretzky, Steven I. Miller & Ronald R. Morgan - 2000 - Educational Studies 31 (2):106-131.

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