Abstract
What are the conditions required for becoming better human beings? What are our limitations and possibilities? I understand "becoming better" as a combined improvement process bringing persons "up from" a negative condition and "up to" a positive one. Today there is a tendency to understand improvement in a one-sided way as a movement up to the mastery of cognitive skills, neglecting the negative conditions that can make these skills mis-educative. I therefore tell six stories in the Western tradition about conditions for a combined improvement process. The first three stories belong to our cultural ABC: an Aristotelian story about moral wisdom which brings people up from being enslaved by passions and up to a good life of virtues; a Biblical story about God's word bringing listeners up from a self-centred life and up into creative work as God's fellow workers, and a short Cave story by Plato about liberation-up from living by common illusions and up to enlightenment from what is perfectly good. The subsequent three stories interpret and actualise these basic stories in different ways: a story about moral wisdom and divine love (Thomas Aquinas), a story about individual freedom and rationality (Immanuel Kant), and a story about the love that builds us up as equal human beings (Søren Kierkegaard). These stories may directly guide us adults-and indirectly the children and youth who learn from our examples-when we struggle to become better human beings. © 2012 The Author(s).
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Wivestad, S. M. (2013). On Becoming Better Human Beings: Six Stories to Live By. Studies in Philosophy and Education, 32(1), 55–71. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-012-9321-8
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