Philosophy and Education
On Tuesday, we took a journey through the history of philosophy
and education. Reaching back well over two thousand years, we looked at what the
philosophers Socrates, Plato, Michel Montaigne, François La Rochefoucauld, and
John Dewey had to say about education.
As social media, such as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter
become more and more relevant in our society, it may at first glance be easy to
criticize reducing our speech to only 140 characters. Yet the seventh century
French philosopher, François La Rochefoucauld, a staple of French salons,
believed that big ideas could be conveyed in a few words. La Rochefoucauld was
a writer of aphorisms, who believed verbosity does not make one’s ideas
important, and in fact oftentimes long-windedness is the easiest way to lose one’s
audience.
Take a look at this video from the School of Life:
Notice toward the end of the video, how Alain de Botton makes
the important point that we cannot assume the way in which we teach (or express
our ideas) is inconsequential due to the importance of our subject manner.
So sometimes less is more, to quote Shakespeare’s’ Hamlet “Brevity
is the soul of wit.”