I was spent after my meeting with the teachers of Ateneo de Naga High School. It was my ninth session of presenting the results of the epistemological survey, so I didn’t really expect to learn anything new. But to my surprise, I still did. It might have been the engagement and interest of the teachers in the discussion that did it. I guess there’s always more where it comes from. Read More »
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absolutist academic writing aesthetics Barbara Kamler Bentz Canberra Catholic Certainty Knowledge Chan & Elliot confessional decidability epistemological beliefs epistemology evaluativist Expert Authority fallibility Gottlieb grounded theory Hofer Innate/Fixed Ability intellectual work IoE judgment domains Katsana King & Kitchener Kuhn Kuhn & Park Learning Effort/Process metaphor Michael Hand Moshman multiplicist Ondoy ontology personal tastes phenomenological physical truths rationalist realist religious beliefs Religious Education scholarly practitioner Schommer socialization social truths


I’ve been reading Dr. Gottlieb’s Ph.D. dissertation, which he graciously emailed to me when I requested for it. It’s fascinating. He talks about the need for studies not so much on the CONTENT of religious thinking (so much written about that already), but about the FORMS and PROCESSES of religious thinking. For example: How different is religious thinking — including, I guess, religious beliefs and knowledge claims — from, say, mathematical or scientific thinking? In other words, as a judgment domain, how distinct is it from the others identified by Kuhn et. al.: personal tastes, aesthetic judgment, value judgment, social truths, and physical truths.