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Peace Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

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In this discussion-paper I look at certain general kinds of peace which certain general kinds of “education” are calculated to bring about, if they succeed; in order first to see which if any of them is ultimately worth having. I find at least one, and at present only one general kind of peace to be worth having; and then examine two broad “realistic” ways — the only “realistic” ways I yet see — in which we might think to achieve that peace. I find neither of those ways to be ultimately capable of delivering that peace, and nearly all the more sensible forms of “peace education” which I have yet heard canvassed, to be tacitly or expressly geared to one or other of those ways. (The present paper came in response to a review of literature on peace education which I was called upon to make, some time ago.) I then consider an “unrealistic” possible way to achieving the same sort of supposedly worthwhile peace, finding that the chances of ever achieving it by that way are slender in the extreme, and that the forms of “education” which I see to be needed in order to achieve it by that general route are themselves so dangerous that the “unrealistic” route too may well find no sensible takers.

After a discursive opening I present an argument with “small holes” in it. By that I mean that assumptions would have to be supplied, at various stages, to make the argument even formally valid; and that many of the steps I do express would have to be rewritten for a similar purpose.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1983 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 This objection follows one made by Mr Timothy Curtis, of Preston, while an ancestor of the present paper was benefitting from an airing at the Human Sciences Seminar, directed by Dr Wolfe Mays at Manchester Polytechnic. Some considerations put afterwards by Mr David Melling of the Polytechnic, I hope to take up in another place.

2 This has debts to points made by Mrs Ulrike Hill, of Manchester, and Miss Pat Collins, of Plymouth, which I hope to take further elsewhere.

Cf. Eliot's:

Or the purpose is beyond the end you figured, And is alterd in fuifilment. (Little Gidding.)