What would your own ideal education in ethics look like in elementary and high school? — DingoJones
Should a basic ethics course be taught at this level? — Dermot Griffin
I would remember that children and young people are amazingly observant, impressionable and very alive to hypocrisy. The best education is to model good behaviour. If — Cuthbert
Right, but in order to be a model of good behaviour one needs to be educated in ethics. Perhaps you disagree but I find such models of good behaviour to be quite rare, bringing us back to square one with a necessity to teach ethics in school…and as early as possible imo. — DingoJones
Right, but in order to be a model of good behaviour one needs to be educated in ethics. — DingoJones
100,000% it is specifically the fact that children are impressionable that induces the need for ethics. — Garrett Travers
I don't think so. You just need not to be a bad person. — Cuthbert
What induces need for ethics being taught to kids is simply the tragic absence of ethics in the adult world. — DingoJones
If by inducing the need for ethics you mean you are worried about kids being taught wrong things then I think ultimately we go back to square one again…you need to teach the good things as early as possible. This touches on my earlier mention of teaching critical thinking and logic even before ethics…what better way to ensure ethical behaviour than teaching the skills to tell the difference on your own? — DingoJones
Aside from ethics, what else do you think makes the cut from philosophy as invaluable education? I think there are definitely many parts of philosophy which are either useless or so esoteric they won’t land with most kids/people. — DingoJones
New ideas like yours are whats needed. :ok: — DingoJones
Kicking and screaming, mostly against their will is the only way humans get moved forward. :wink: — DingoJones
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.