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Philip E. Dow (Ph.D., Cambridge University) is superintendent of Rosslyn Academy in Nairobi, Kenya. Dow has over a decade of classroom experience, teaching advanced courses in social studies and history at the high school level. He is the author of "School in the Clouds": The Rift Valley Academy mehr anzeigen Story. weniger anzeigen

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Philip Dow has written an excellent treatise here on what it means to develop intellectual character and at the same time given us a road map to developing that character in homes and schools. As opposed to moral virtues, or how we act rightly (which aren’t too separate from these), Dow concentrates on intellectual virtues, or how we think rightly.

The author begins with short, very accessible definitions of his seven intellectual virtues: Intellectual courage, carefulness, tenacity, fair-mindedness, curiosity, honesty and humility. In each, he describes the virtue and illustrates it from his own deep intellectual curiosity.

The second section of the book describes the fruits of building intellectual character: the benefits of knowing about more than we currently do and the benefits of better thinking. Because he is a Christian and writes from a Christian perspective, Dow then describes two additional fruits of intellectual character: Loving God better and Loving Your Neighbor better.

Taken together, these first two parts of the book make a reader yearn for a society given to intellectual character rather than our current society where most of us seem happy to hunker behind our intellectual barricades and fire artillery at those with whom we disagree; all out of our own lack of intellectual curiosity, fair-mindedness or humility.

In his final part, Dow describes a ten-step plan for developing intellectual character and seven principles for intentionally founding an education on the development of intellectual virtue. While these are directed at educators they are easily (as the author notes) adaptable to parents with their children—or (though the author does not expressly say it) adaptable to a personal plan for developing ones own intellectual character.

In a fulsome appendix, Dr. Dow describes various ways he and others have implemented these ideas in actual educational settings.

We live in times where character—moral and intellectual—seems the least of our concerns. If we are to turn from this destructive path, we must be very intentional about reviving the primacy of character. For intellectual character, Dow’s book is a very solid set of starting blocks.
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fathermurf | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 4, 2023 |
As a Christian, I care about growing in character, but beyond character formation, it is also imperative that we give space for our intellectual formation. Philip Dow, author of the new book from IVP academic, Virtuous Minds: Intellectual Character Formation, argues that. “Our intellectual character influences our lives just as moral character does, and with at least as much force. The only difference is that intellectual character is concerned not with our actions as much as the thinking habits we are developing as we seek to use knowledge (22).”


Virtuous Minds: Intellectual Character Formation by Philip Dow
In this thought-provoking book, Dow explores the habits which contribute to our mental formation, discusses the fruits of good thinking habits and offers suggestions for how we can become people of intellectual character. In the appendices Dow shares how intellectual virtue is taught in an educational context (especially at Rosslyn Academy in Nairobi, Kenya where Dow is superintendent). The intended audience for this book is educators and parents, but I think it has significant things to say to all of us. As a parent I want to teach my kids to think well, but I also want to think well myself! Dow’s advice will help us as parents and teachers pass on good thinking habits and it will help the rest of us attend to our own mental formation.

In part one of Virtuous Minds, Dow describes the seven habits of the virtuous mind. These include:

Intellectual Courage- honest thinking which is willing to make personal sacrifices in pursuit of truth.
Intellectual Carefulness- coming to judicious conclusion, attending to details and not taking short cuts.
Intellectual Tenacity-a commitment to stretching yourself mentally in striving through mental difficulties.
Intellectual Fair-Mindedness- a willingness to give a fair-hearing to other views and competing hypotheses.
Intellectual Curiosity- A commitment to lifelong-learning in the service of noble aims (i.e. some curiosity will kill cats, but curiosity which is not motivated out of self-interest can lead to important discoveries and new insights).
Intellectual Honesty- Committing to the truth both as an end and as a means (not cutting corners, cheating, engaging in falsehoods).
Intellectual Humility- Taking on the status of ‘lifelong-learner’ rather than ‘expert’ and being humble enough to receive correction in your thinking.
Part two explores the fruits of intellectual character formation. Good thinking habits help you know more and think better. But lest we relegate the benefits of intellectual formation to the cognitive sphere, learning to think carefully and well about God, the world, your neighbor, current events, social issues, etc., actually enables us to love God and others better. Of course the ‘benefits’ are not the thing itself, and intellectual formation is simply a dogged quest for ‘the truth.’ The benefits come from our commitment to learning and knowing truth.

In part three Dow has an eye for what this looks like in practice. In one chapter he gives suggestions of how we can grow in our intellectual character. In the next, he gives suggestions for parents and educators on how to pass on formational thinking habits. His personal suggestions come in the form of ‘steps’ toward forming an action plan to develop a virtuous mind. His suggestions for educators and parents come in the form of guiding principles which will aid in passing this information on to others (especially youth and children).

Dow never makes intellectual formation an all-inclusive pursuit. Of course we want to attend to people’s spiritual health, moral formation, social skills, etc. But our intellectual habits will impact these other areas as well. Dow demonstrates that our intellectual formation (or malformation) does impact other spheres as well. I found myself underlining a lot in this book.

I especially liked how Dow uses the concept of virtue. In moral philosophy, virtue and character formation happens through habitual practice. We become virtuous by consistently and habitually engaging in virtuous acts. In this book, Dow names the habits which make us into good thinkers. When I consider each of his seven habits of ’intellectually formed thinkers,’ I can see examples of where I think well. I also see where I can grow as a thinker.

The appendices do a phenomenal job of exploring and demonstrating the concept of intellectual character formation within an educational setting. However part three of the book seems rather basic and I wished it was filled in a little more. I found myself wishing for a more indepth treatment of how this looks (or may look) in practice. I do not

. I think that that teachers, educators, and Christian Education directors will make good use of this book. Parents will also find this helpful. I found this book personally edifying and instructive and give it four stars.

Thank you to InterVarsity Academic for providing me copy of this book in exchange for this review.
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Jamichuk | 1 weitere Rezension | May 22, 2017 |

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