<p><strong>'Clearheaded, acutely perceptive, and utterly lucid, this is the one book about education which <em>everyone</em> can and should make time to read.</strong>' - <em>Randall Curren, University of Rochester, USA</em></p><p><strong>'This is a clearly structured and thought-out book…It’s polemical but also introduces the reader to key arguments and issues.'</strong> - <em>Stephen Law, Royal Institute of Philosophy</em></p>
<p><strong>'a rare example of a philosophical discourse with a direct relevance to contemporary policymaking...If forthcoming debates about education policy do not draw heavily on what he has to say here, then they will be severely impoverished'</strong> <em>Julian Baggini, Times Educational Supplement</em></p><p><strong>'Clearheaded, acutely perceptive, and utterly lucid, this is the one book about education which <em>everyone</em> can and should make time to read.</strong>' - <em>Randall Curren, University of Rochester, USA</em></p><p><strong>'This is a clearly structured and thought-out book…It’s polemical but also introduces the reader to key arguments and issues.'</strong> - <em>Stephen Law, Royal Institute of Philosophy</em></p>
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Harry Brighouse is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is a well-known authority on the philosophy of education and is a regular columnist in the Times Education Supplement. He is the author of Social Choice and Social Justice.