From Empiricism to Hermeneutics: Educational Leadership as a Practical and Moral Activity
Abstract
With the demise of the empiricist theory of knowledge and the increased prominence of postempiricist and hermeneutical perspectives, it is clear that various aspects of our social lives – including educational leadership – should no longer be thought of in terms of technological or instrumental rationality and technical expertise. Although the current philosophical ferment allows for different ways to rethink leadership, this article examines the implications of one school of thought – philosophical hermeneutics – for the research on, and especially the practice of, educational leadership. The central point is that this perspective, when interpreted in terms of how we think of ourselves as persons, results in a conceptualisation of leadership as a predominantly practical and moral activity.
Keywords
Citation
Smith, J.K. and Blase, J. (1991), "From Empiricism to Hermeneutics: Educational Leadership as a Practical and Moral Activity", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 29 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000002467
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1991, MCB UP Limited