Article citationsMore >>

Deleuze, G. Vocabulaire de Deleuze. (réalisé par Raphaël Bessis), 2003. Avaialble: http://vadeker.net/humanite/philosophie/vocabulaire_deleuze.pdf Accessed 04/07/2017.

has been cited by the following article:

Article

The Loss of the Modern Project of Future, Humanity and Individuality: The Philosophy of Education in the Plan of Immanence

1Department of Philosophy and Human Sciences, University of Southwestern Bahia (UESB), Vitória da Conquista-BA, Brazil

2University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA


American Journal of Educational Research. 2017, Vol. 5 No. 7, 747-751
DOI: 10.12691/education-5-7-8
Copyright © 2017 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Cestari Luiz Artur dos Santos, Gouveia Gleidson. The Loss of the Modern Project of Future, Humanity and Individuality: The Philosophy of Education in the Plan of Immanence. American Journal of Educational Research. 2017; 5(7):747-751. doi: 10.12691/education-5-7-8.

Correspondence to: Gouveia  Gleidson, University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA. Email: lacestari@hotmail.com; gleidson.gouveia@gmail.com

Abstract

This text aims to discuss a purpose to present a philosophy of education based on the arguments from Deleuze and Gutarri’s thinking, specifically about the concept of plan of immanence. Two tasks are playing at this context. First, the evaluation of modernity will put in debate three important notions from it: the modern project of future, the humanity and individuality. Then, it will point out the end of the modern promises as emancipatory discourses to be achieved in the future and consolidated during the history, as well as the process that have transformed at same time the human beings in subject and the individuality in individualism. At the second task, it will talk about the terms by which we can present a proposal to philosophize in immanence of life, thinking about how education can working as line of escape of the ephemeral capitalist socialization and discussing two concepts of Deleuze and Guatarri’s thinking: affections and perceptions.

Keywords