Phan Huy P, Ngu Bing H, Chen Si Chi, Wu Lijuing, Lin Wei-Wen, Hsu Chao-Sheng
School of Education, University of New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
Department of Education, National Taipei University of Education, Taipei, Taiwan.
Front Psychol. 2020 Oct 8;11:580186. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.580186. eCollection 2020.
, also known as , is an important subject in Taiwan with institutions (e.g., high school) offering degree programs and courses that focus on quality learning and implementation of life education. What is interesting from the perspective of Taiwanese education is that the teaching of life education also incorporates a number of Eastern-derived and conceptualized tenets, for example, Buddhist teaching and the importance of spiritual wisdom. This premise contends then that life education in Taiwan, in general, is concerned with the promotion, fulfillment, and cherishing of quality life experiences (e.g., personal contentment, happiness). One example of life education, which resonates with other spiritual beliefs and religious faiths (e.g., Hinduism), is related to spiritual cultivation and the enlightenment of life wisdom. Our own teaching of the subject, likewise, places emphasis on the goal of teaching students to seek meaningful understanding of and appreciation for three major, interrelated components of life education: , , and . It has been acknowledged, to a certain degree, that life education has made meaningful contributions, such as the creation and facilitation of a civil, vibrant society, and that many Taiwanese individuals show dignity, respect for elders, and reverence for spiritual and religious faiths. For example, aside from high-quality hospice care, many Taiwanese engage in different types of benevolent acts (e.g., providing spiritual advice to someone who is dying), where possible. Life education is a beneficial subject for teaching and learning as its theoretical understanding may help individuals cope with pathologies and negative conditions and life experiences. One negative life experience, in this case, is the ultimate fate of humankind: death. Approaching death and/or the onset of grief is something that we all have to experience. How does one approach death? It is not easy feat, and of course, grief for a loved one is personal, and some of us struggle with this. We contend that spiritual cultivation and enlightenment, arising from life education, may assist us with the topic of death (e.g., the possibility of transcendence beyond the realm of life). More importantly however, from our own teaching experiences and research development, we strongly believe and rationalize that the subject of life education could, indeed, coincide with and support (Seligman, 1999, 2010; Seligman and Csíkszentmihályi, 2000). Forming the premise of the present conceptual analysis article, we propose that a person's "spiritual and enlightened self," reflecting the convergence of three major aspects of life education (i.e., philosophical reflection, enrichment of personal well-being, and spiritual cultivation), would result in the initiation and creation of a number of virtues and positive characteristics, for example, having a in life, having a , showing , , etc. These virtues and quality characteristics, from our philosophical reasoning, are equivalent to those qualities that the paradigm of positive psychology advocates for. In summary, we conceptualize that the subject of life education, from the perspective of Taiwanese education, may intertwine with the paradigm of positive psychology. A person's spiritual and enlightened self, or his/her "holistic self," from our rationalization, is the ultimate optimal life experience that he/she may have, enabling him/her to address the gamut of life conditions and experiences. The distinctive nature of life education in this case, as a point of summary, is that it incorporates spiritual beliefs and religious faiths (e.g., Buddhist faith), encouraging a person to seek nature and divine-human relationships, as well as to contemplate and to explore the complex nature of his/her inner self. The notion of , for example, as "evidence" of spirituality, entailing the endless cycle of birth, rebirth, and redeath, may provide a person with hope into the afterlife. Such esoteric discourse, we contend, is positive and optimistic, allowing individuals to discard the dividing line between life and death.
[具体主题],也被称为[另一名称],在台湾是一个重要的学科,许多机构(如高中)提供专注于优质学习和生命教育实践的学位课程。从台湾教育的角度来看,有趣的是生命教育的教学还融入了许多源自东方并概念化的教义,例如佛教教义以及精神智慧的重要性。这一前提认为,总体而言,台湾的生命教育关注优质生活体验的提升、实现和珍视(如个人满足感、幸福感)。生命教育的一个例子与其他精神信仰和宗教信仰(如印度教)相呼应,它与精神修养和生命智慧的启迪有关。我们自己在该学科的教学同样强调教导学生寻求对生命教育三个主要相关组成部分的有意义理解和欣赏的目标:[第一部分]、[第二部分]和[第三部分]。在一定程度上,人们已经认识到生命教育做出了有意义的贡献,比如创造并促进了一个文明、充满活力的社会,而且许多台湾人展现出尊严、尊重长辈以及对精神和宗教信仰的崇敬。例如,除了高质量的临终关怀,许多台湾人在可能的情况下还会参与不同类型的善举(如为临终者提供精神建议)。生命教育是一个有益的教学科目,因为其理论理解可能有助于个人应对病理状况、负面情况和生活经历。在这种情况下,一种负面的生活经历就是人类的最终命运:死亡。面对死亡和/或悲伤的开始是我们所有人都必须经历的。一个人如何面对死亡呢?这并非易事,当然,对亲人的悲伤是个人的,我们中的一些人会为此而挣扎。我们认为,源自生命教育的精神修养和启迪可能会帮助我们应对死亡这个话题(如超越生命领域的可能性)。然而更重要的是,从我们自己的教学经验和研究发展来看,我们坚信并合理推断生命教育这一学科确实可以与[具体理论或概念]相契合并提供支持(塞利格曼,1999年、2010年;塞利格曼和奇克森特米哈伊,2000年)。作为本概念分析文章的前提,我们提出一个人的“精神启迪自我”,反映了生命教育的三个主要方面(即哲学反思、个人幸福感的提升和精神修养)的融合,会引发并创造出许多美德和积极特征,例如,对生活有[某种态度],有[某种特质],表现出[某种品质]等等。从我们的哲学推理来看,这些美德和品质特征等同于积极心理学范式所倡导的那些品质。总之,我们认为从台湾教育的角度来看,生命教育这一学科可能与积极心理学范式相互交织。从我们的合理化推断来看,一个人的精神启迪自我,或他/她的“整体自我”,是他/她可能拥有的最终最优生活体验,使他/她能够应对各种生活状况和经历。作为总结,在这种情况下生命教育的独特性质在于它融入了精神信仰和宗教信仰(如佛教信仰),鼓励人们寻求自然和神人关系,以及思考和探索其内心自我的复杂本质。例如,[相关概念]的概念,作为灵性的“证据”,意味着生死轮回的无尽循环,可能会给人带来对来世的希望。我们认为这种深奥的论述是积极乐观的,让个人摒弃生死之间的界限。