Abstract
The orthodox mode of social justice in mathematics education is code-justice, and, in its disregard for the ethical realm of qualitative discrimination, it boils down to proceduralism. An alternative mode, ethics-justice, gives primacy to the ethical, and shares features in common with the jazz metaphor. From the perspective of ethics-justice, but not necessarily from the perspective of code-justice, streaming can be seen as an injustice. Recent changes in the social world, and in the self-constitution of the individual, have led to the need for ethics-justice to be given primacy. Further, humanistic mathematics has become a justice?and not just a philosophical or pedagogical?issue, and needs to be given renewed emphasis.
Jim Neyland