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Philosophy as Disability & Exclusion: The Development of Theories on Blindness, Touch and the Arts in England, 1688-2010 [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x10 mm, kaal: 275 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2015
  • Kirjastus: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1681232332
  • ISBN-13: 9781681232331
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x10 mm, kaal: 275 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2015
  • Kirjastus: Information Age Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1681232332
  • ISBN-13: 9781681232331

This book explores the history of arts education for people who are blind in England from 1688 to 2010. It argues that blindness relates to ethical philosophy and that arts education through touch reveals much about human psychology. It introduces the concept of passive exclusion in knowledge creation.



Philosophy as Disability and Exclusion examines the history of ideas on arts in the education of people who are blind in England, from 1688 to 2010. This book also examines a number of the earlier influences on the enlightenment, and the international context of this topic. The two hypotheses on which this study is based are:

(1) Our understanding of blindness in English intellectual culture is less to do with homologous physical characteristics. Instead it is more to do with an ethical philosophy of human capacity.

(2) The arts education of people who are blind through touch tells us much about our psychology of mythologies and the intellectual construction of human thought. Furthermore, the myth that people who are blind are incapable of visual arts and have an enhanced capacity for the musical arts is one of the most engrained modern folklores. It is part of our cultural, intellectual and philosophical conscience.

In the process of investigating these hypotheses, this book argues that philosophies have linked immorality, intelligence and physical ability. These have become connected in ways that are unrelated to eyesight in order to fulfill broader cultural processes of developing social theory. In this book, the process of knowledge creation is termed passive exclusion and is analyzed through an epistemological model of examining disability and exclusion.

Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
1 Introduction: Does Philosophy Disable?
1(12)
The Context and Definitions of this Book
4(5)
The Structure of This Book
9(4)
SECTION I Philosophical and Cognitive Studies of Blindness, Touch, and Art
2 The Epistemological Model of Understanding Disability and Passive Exclusion
13(20)
Micro Studies of Disability
16(3)
Macro Studies of Disability
19(3)
Ontologies and Diagnoses of Blindness and Touch
22(6)
Active and Passive Poles of Exclusion
28(5)
3 Epistemologies and Ontologies of Blindness: From da Vinci to Diderot
33(20)
Locke's Use of Blindness in Understanding Philosophy
39(2)
Isaac Newton's Study of God and Light
41(4)
Material Studies of Locke's Hypothesis in the Eighteenth Century
45(4)
Discussion
49(4)
4 A History of Empirical Research on Blindness, Touch, and the Arts: From Charlton Deas to Kennedy and Spence
53(28)
The Empirical Development of a Psychology of Mind and Aesthetics in the Twentieth Century
54(5)
Contemporary Studies of Molyneux's Question to Locke
59(5)
Studies of Three Dimensional Aesthetics, Spatial Awareness, and Emotional Development
64(4)
Studies on the Mechanical Functions of Multi-Modal Perception and Blindness
68(4)
Contemporary Philosophical Studies on the Nature of Perception
72(2)
Discussion
74(7)
SECTION II An Examination of the Development of English Institutions for the Blind
5 The Philosophies of English Institutions for the Blind
81(26)
The Social Philosophy of Segregated Moral Education for the Blind
82(4)
The Founding of English Education for the Blind
86(3)
The Influences on the First English Asylums
89(1)
The Development of Curricula in the English Asylums
90(5)
The Use of Handcrafts from the Early Nineteenth Century
95(3)
The Role of Funding in the Early Years of Institutions for the Blind
98(6)
Discussion
104(3)
6 Creative and Imaginative Education in English Schools for the Blind
107(14)
Music Education in Asylums and Schools for the Blind
108(2)
Music Education in English Institutions for the Blind in the Late Nineteenth Century
110(2)
Music Training in the Twentieth Century
112(1)
Other Creative and Imaginative Teaching in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
113(3)
Discussion
116(5)
7 Legal Inclusion in English Education
121(14)
The Influences on a Social Philosophy of Disability Equality in England
122(3)
The Formation of Warnock's Committee
125(2)
An Examination of the Passing of the 1981 Education Act in England and Wales
127(3)
An Examination of the Political Process Leading to the 1981 Education Act
130(1)
Discussion
131(4)
8 The Development of Inclusion in English Museums, Galleries, and Monuments
135(14)
The Nature of Creative Inclusion in the Twenty-First Century
136(2)
The Roots of Creative Inclusion in English Cultural Institutions
138(6)
Discussion
144(5)
SECTION III Conclusion
9 Conclusion
149(6)
Glossary 155(6)
References 161
Simon Hayhoe, Canterbury Christ Church University / London School of Economics