Got to this article via Brian Leiter's site. It's from the Boston Review. The article is here. The image is from the article. Here are some interesting passages from the article:
"In 1971 the military dictatorship that ruled Brazil
from 1964 to 1985 eliminated philosophy from high schools. Teachers,
professors in departments of education, and political activists
championed its return, while most academic philosophers were either
indifferent or suspicious. The dictatorship seems to have understood
philosophy’s potential to create engaged citizens; it replaced
philosophy with a course on Moral and Civic Education and one on
Brazil’s Social and Political Organization ('to inculcate good manners
and patriotic values and to justify the political order of the
generals,'one UFBA colleague recalls from his high school days)."
"But can philosophy really become part of ordinary life? Wasn’t Socrates
executed for trying? Athenians didn’t thank him for guiding them to the
examined life, but instead accused him of spreading moral corruption and
atheism. Plato concurs: Socrates failed because most citizens just
aren’t philosophers in his view. To make them question the beliefs and
customs they were brought up in isn’t useful because they can’t replace
them with examined ones. So Socrates ended up pushing them into
nihilism. To build politics on a foundation of philosophy, Plato
concludes, doesn’t mean turning all citizens into philosophers, but
putting true philosophers in charge of the city—like parents in charge
of children. I wonder, though, why Plato didn’t consider the
alternative: If citizens had been trained in dialectic debate from early
on—say, starting in high school—might they have reacted differently to
Socrates? Perhaps the Brazilian experiment will tell."
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