作为智力美德萌芽的原始奇迹

C. Peng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文认为,托马斯·e·杰克逊提出的P4C中原始奇迹的概念可以被视为智力美德的“萌芽”或种子。我对他的见解的理解是受到孟子的道德修养观和亚里士多德对美德伦理的幸福主义描述的启发。孟子认为,每个人都有四种天生的美德萌芽,而道德教育的目的就是培育这些道德萌芽,使它们成长为成熟的美德。就P4C而言,杰克逊认为我们所有人生来就有一种特殊的惊奇感,他称之为“原始的惊奇”。将他的观点与孟子关于道德萌芽的农业比喻结合起来,我将进一步论证,每个孩子内在的好奇感都可以被视为美德的萌芽。此外,一旦孩子们的原始好奇通过在课堂上实施P4C而转化为美德,我建议,根据亚里士多德的美德伦理学,这种令人钦佩的性格特征应该被理解为一种智力美德。这是因为好奇的美德可以促进儿童智力的繁荣,这完全支持亚里士多德的论点,即最幸福的生活是哲学的生活,哲学始于好奇。简而言之,如果原始的惊奇作为智力美德的萌芽可以为人类带来最高的好处,那么我认为,对孩子们进行哲学教育的主要目标之一,就是把他们原始的惊奇变成一种美德的习惯,这样他们就能过一种深思熟虑的生活。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
primal wonder as a sprout of intellectual virtue
This paper argues that the concept of primal wonder in P4C, proposed by Thomas E. Jackson, can be seen as a “sprout” or seed of intellectual virtue. My understanding of his insight is inspired by Mengzi’s view of moral cultivation and Aristotle’s eudaimonist account of virtue ethics. According to Mengzi, all humans possess four innate sprouts of virtue, and the aim of moral education is to nurture these moral sprouts so that they can grow up into fully ripened virtues. In terms of P4C, Jackson contends that all of us are born already with a special feeling of wonder which he refers to as “primal wonder”. Synthesizing his statement with Mengzi’s agricultural metaphor of moral sprouts, I shall take one step forward by arguing that the innate sense of wonder within every child can be seen as a sprout of virtue. Additionally, once children’s primal wonder has been transformed into a virtue through implementing P4C in the classroom, this admirable character trait, I suggest, should be understood as an intellectual virtue according to Aristotelian virtue ethics. This is because the virtue of wonder can promote children’s intellectual flourishing, which is fully endorsed by Aristotle’s contention that the happiest kind of life is a philosophical one, and that philosophy begins in wonder. In short, if primal wonder as a sprout of intellectual virtue can lead to the highest good for human beings, then one of the main educational goals of doing philosophy with children, I suggest, is to turn their primal wonder into a virtuous habit so that they can live an examined life.
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