| 英文摘要 |
In his book The Ignorant Schoolmaster: Five Lessons in Intellectual Emancipation, the contemporary French thinker J. Rancière presents a perspective on intellectual emancipation that differs from traditional educational discourse through a reexamination of J. Jacotot’s universal teaching. Unlike the model that relies on knowledgeable individuals imparting knowledge to gradually improve the ignorant, he advocates that teachers start from the equality of intelligence with their students. This approach allows students to break free from their dependence on higher intellect and affirm their capacity as something shared by all. In this article, the author attempts to connect this viewpoint with the concept of I. Kant’s “enlightenment,” particularly M. Foucault’s interpretation of this concept. The discussion explores how Rancière’s teaching perspective enables teachers to encourage students to overcome laziness and cowardice in the use of their intellectual capacities during the teaching process. It transgresses the current structure of guidance and being guided, practicing the motto of enlightenment, “Sapere aude!” in a way that breaks through the dialectics of enlightenment. |