1st Edition

Civility in Politics and Education

Edited By Deborah Mower, Wade L. Robison Copyright 2012
    296 Pages
    by Routledge

    296 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book examines the concept of civility and the conditions of civil disagreement in politics and education. Although many assume that civility is merely polite behavior, it functions to aid rational discourse. Building on this basic assumption, the book offers multiple accounts of civility and its contribution to citizenship, deliberative democracy, and education from Eastern and Western as well as classic and modern perspectives. Given that civility is essential to all aspects of public life, it is important to address how civility may be taught. While much of the book is theoretical, contributors also apply theory to practice, offering concrete methods for teaching civility at the high school and collegiate levels.

    Preface Jim Leach Introduction  Wade L. Robison and Deborah S. Mower  I. The Problems of Civility and Incivility  1. Incivility as a Tragedy of the Commons  Mark Kingwell  2. Epistemic Peers and Civil Disagreement  Kristin Schaupp  3. Debunking Three Myths about Civility  Timothy Shiell  II. Accounts of Civility  4. Communication and Ordinary Civility  Megan Laverty  5. An Aristotelian Account of Civility  Howard Curzer  6. Civility and Magnanimity  Andrew Terjesen  III. Expanding Accounts  7. Civility Filial Piety as a Tool for Civility: The Confucian Project  Kam-Por Yu  8. Confucianism and Global Civility  Steve Angle  9. Civility as a Condition of Citizenship  Alan Tomhave  10. Civility, Impartiality, and Cosmopolitanism  Laura Arcila Villa  IV. Teaching Civility  11. Civility and Education  Harry Brighouse  12. Teaching Civility for Democratic Deliberation  Robert F. Ladenson  13.  Civility as Critical Thinking  Jeff Buechner  14. Competition in the Classroom  Paul Gaffney

    Biography

    Deborah S. Mower is an Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Youngstown State University. She received her Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. She received a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship on Virtue Ethics and Confucianism at Wesleyan University in Connecticut in 2008. She is a member of the Executive Committee for the Society for Ethics Across the Curriculum and has published multiple papers in applied ethics. She co-directed (with Wade Robison) the 11th International Conference on Ethics Across the Curriculum on "Citizenship and Civility" in 2009.

    Wade L. Robison is the Ezra A. Hale Professor of Applied Ethics at the Rochester Institute of Technology. He received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He was President of the International Hume Society for sixteen years and is active in Ethics Across the Curriculum at RIT and elsewhere. He has written, edited or co-edited 9 books. His most recent book, with L. Reeser, is titled Ethical Decision Making in Social Work (2000). His book Decisions in Doubt: The Environment and Public Policy (1994) won the Nelson A. Rockefeller Prize in Social Science and Public Policy.