Plato vs. Aquinas: Educational Views

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Plato vs. Aquinas: Educational Views

The field and concept of education is a vast and long philosophized topic. For centuries, both the educated and commoner have lamented, discussed, debated, and argued over its place in society. The worth and need for education has consumed the political world for decades. Much effort and money is spent educating the youth of the future. While schools in the sense that we know them today are a relatively new concept in the scope of time, the broader idea of education has existed since early mankind. As the human species has evolved from hunter-gathers, to agriculturists, to industrialists, so has the concept of education. The human animal has always educated itself on some level, gaining knowledge through interactions with the environment. In addition, the human species, while providing education for all, continues to maintain a hierarchy of learning, allowing some to achieve a greatness of knowledge over others. These "chosen" educators willingly assume the role and responsibility of educating others and bestowing the knowledge they have garnered onto the masses. This modern day scenario of teacher and pupil is similar to the idea Plato described in The Republic, of an educational system where morality, truth, and virtue are driving forces of those who assume the role of educator. Aquinas also maintained the importance of a teacher's beliefs and strong allegiance to bestowing knowledge on those who are the pupils. The thoughts and beliefs of these two philosophers set the foundation for our modern day education system.

In today’s modern society, education is considered a commodity or a product. There is an obsession with the quality control of our educational product, with monitoring t...

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...ives of Aquinas and Plato are the infrastructure of the knowledge sharing, open questioning, self-discovery, and cooperative learning that allows the field of education to prosper and maintain the fortitude it does presently and for future generations to come.

Sources

1) "Aquinas and Wisdom as the Aim of Education." . N.p., n.d. Web. 21 Apr. 2014. .

2) Muhammed, Sultan. "Plato and Education." Education. N.p., 18 Nov. 2008. Web. 21 Apr. 2014. .

3) de la Tour, Fr. Herve. "EDOCERE." ST. THOMAS ON TEACHING (): 1. Print.

4) Smith, Mark. "Plato on education." infed. Education, Index, Thinkers and innovators, 8 May 1997. Web. 23 Apr. 2014. .

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