大学理念与日益增长的功利主义压力——对亚的斯亚贝巴大学的批判性反思

Setargew Kenaw
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引用次数: 7

摘要

大学教育的目的和目标是什么?简而言之,大学教育的哲学是什么?在处理这个中心问题时,不同的教育家和哲学家为我们提供了不同的表述。尽管关于大学教育应该是什么样子的设想不同,产生了不同的观点,但人们普遍认为,如果一所大学要维持其大学的身份,就应该具备某些特征。本文首先尝试建立大学理念的概念框架。大学教育的目的和目标是什么?简而言之,大学教育的哲学是什么?在处理这个中心问题时,许多教育家和哲学家对大学教育应该是什么进行了纽曼式的分析,更具体地说,分析引起我们注意的区别,即“有用的”知识和为其本身而寻求的知识之间的区别,本文随后认为,大学教育的目的应该主要是自由主义的或哲学的,而不是技术或职业教育,其明显和最终的标准是“有用性”。然后,论文向我们概述了亚的斯亚贝巴大学的历史,特别强调了影响其使命和目标的压力。正如主题所暗示的那样,本文的中心论点是亚的斯亚贝巴大学日益受到资本主义消费主义的压力。为了证明这一点,本文试图在三个层面上进行分析:(i)全球资本主义背景和对一些西方大学的功利主义压力的论证;埃塞俄比亚采用自由市场经济原则、国际金融机构的作用和有关的发展情况;(三)校园内对上述影响的反应及其背后的误解。因此,本文强烈认为,亚的斯亚贝巴大学越来越多地成为极端功利主义或消费主义需求的牺牲品,这反过来又会导致它偏离大学应该解决的核心教育任务之一,即培养和训练思想。除了讨论全球和地方的政治经济发展,这些发展表明了所讨论的压力的现实之外,该文件还试图通过利用过去几年大学内一些象征性的发展来证实其观点。杂志Vol.1(1) 2003: 35-61
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The Idea of a University and the Increasing Pressures of Utilitarianism: A Critical Reflection on Addis Ababa University
What are the aims and objectives of university education? What is, in short, the philosophy of university education? In dealing with this central question, various educators and philosophers have provided us with different formulations. Despite the contending conceptions that emanate from diverse assumptions about what university education ought to be, there is a widespread agreement that there should be certain features that should be there if a university should maintain itself as a university. This paper tries, first, to establish the conceptual framework on the idea of a university. Drawing on What are the aims and objectives of university education? What is, in short, the philosophy of university education? In dealing with this central question, various educators and philosophers have provided the Newmanesqean analysis of what university education ought to be, and, more specifically, the distinction that the analysis brings to our attention, namely the distinction between “useful” knowledge and knowledge that is sought for its own sake, the paper subsequently argues that the end of university education should primarily be liberal or philosophical as opposed to technical or vocational education whose obvious and ultimate criterion is “usefulness.” The paper then gives us an overview of the history of Addis Ababa University with particular emphasis to the pressures that have affected its missions and aims. As hinted by the very topic, the central thesis of this paper is that Addis Ababa University has increasingly come under the pressures of capitalist consumerism. In order to substantiate this point, it is attempted to employ an analysis that works at three levels: (i) the global capitalist context and the demonstration of the utilitarian pressures on a few Western universities; (ii) Ethiopia's adoption of the principle of the free market economy, the role of international financial agencies, and related developments; and (iii) the in-campus responses to the afore-mentioned influences and the misconceptions behind them. The paper therefore strongly argues that Addis Ababa University is increasingly falling prey to extremely utilitarian or consumerist demands, which would in turn lead it astray from one of the central educational missions that a university should address, i.e. the cultivation and the disciplining of the mind. In addition to discussing the global and local politico-economic developments that demonstrate the reality of the pressures in question, the paper tries to substantiate its point by drawing on a few but symbolic developments within the University during the past few years. EJOSSAH Vol.1(1) 2003: 35-61
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