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Glossary›Praxis

Glossary

Praxis

The integration of theory and action; reflective practice that transforms understanding into embodied wisdom and conscious engagement with reality.

What is Praxis?

Praxis is the process by which a theory, lesson, or skill is enacted, embodied, realized, applied, or put into practice. More than mere action or theory alone, praxis represents the living union of reflection and engagement—a dynamic cycle in which thought informs action, and action deepens thought. The term has served philosophers, educators, theologians, and social change agents as a framework for understanding how human beings move from abstract knowledge to concrete transformation.

In philosophical contexts, praxis distinguishes itself from two related activities: theoria (contemplation or theoretical knowledge) and poiesis (making or production). Praxis is a combination of the two as practical thought or reflection towards the goal of action. Within spiritual and contemplative traditions, praxis describes the embodied integration of insight—when meditation becomes ethics, when prayer becomes service, when understanding becomes compassion in motion.

Origins & Lineage

The term entered English in the 1580s from Medieval Latin praxis meaning “practice, exercise, action” (mid-13th century, opposite of theory), from Greek praxis “practice, action, doing,” from stem of prassein, prattein “to do, to act.” In Ancient Greek the word praxis (πρᾶξις) referred to activity engaged in by free people.

In his works, Aristotle developed the concept that humans can be defined by three basic attributes: theoria, poiesis, and praxis. Writing in the 4th century BCE, Aristotle argued that praxis needed to be implemented in a moral and just manner with the intention of acting in the best interests of humankind. The Greeks referred to this consideration of what is good for others as phronesis, or practical wisdom.

The concept underwent significant evolution through Western philosophy. In Kant, praxis is the application of a theory to cases encountered in experience, but is also ethically significant thought, or practical reason, that is, reasoning about what there should be as opposed to what there is. Kant’s placing of the practical above the theoretical influenced the subsequent thought of Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel.

Marx uses the term “praxis” in two of his early works: the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 and the Theses on Feuerbach (1845). It is in Marx that the concept becomes central to the new philosophical ideal of transforming the world through revolutionary activity. For Marx, praxis represents a dialectical synthesis of theory and practice oriented toward transforming extant social relations.

August Cieszkowski in 1838 was one of the earliest philosophers to use the term praxis to mean ‘action oriented towards changing society’. Later, the philosophy of praxis greatly influenced the works of Antonio Gramsci and Paulo Freire – two of the most cited figures in educational thought – and how they incorporated and expanded upon Marx’s revolutionary formulation. Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed was written in Portuguese between 1967 and 1968, but first published in Spanish in 1968.

How It’s Practiced

Praxis manifests differently across philosophical, educational, political, and spiritual domains, but all share the common thread of uniting reflection with action.

In educational settings, praxis takes the form of critical pedagogy. For Freire, critical thinking and acting combine to form what he calls the “praxis” — the one true mark of human beings: “Only men are praxis,” he writes, “the praxis which, as the reflection and action which truly transform reality, is the source of knowledge and creation.” This approach rejects passive reception of information in favor of dialogue, questioning, and collective transformation.

In contemplative traditions, praxis represents the integration of inner experience with outer engagement. Contemplative practice in Christianity is viewed as a vital approach that connects inner reflection with social action. Artmaking is spiritual praxis—both physical labor and contemplative praxis. Practices such as Centering Prayer, Lectio Divina, meditation, and mindful service all exemplify contemplative praxis when they move practitioners from insight to embodied action.

In social movements, praxis describes the iterative relationship between theory and organizing. Activists develop analysis, test it through action, reflect on outcomes, refine understanding, and act again. This cycle distinguishes praxis from either abstract theorizing or unreflective activism.

The practice always involves specific elements: observation of reality, reflection on conditions, decision-making informed by values and analysis, action that engages the world, and renewed reflection that informs the next cycle.

Praxis Today

Contemporary seekers encounter praxis in multiple contexts:

Spiritual communities increasingly emphasize contemplative praxis—practices that unite meditation with ethical action, prayer with justice work, inner development with service. Organizations like the Center for Action and Contemplation explicitly ground their work in the integration of contemplation and action. Retreats, workshops, and training programs now commonly address this integration rather than treating spirituality and engagement as separate domains.

Educational institutions influenced by critical pedagogy incorporate praxis through participatory learning, community-based research, service learning, and pedagogies that center student voice and social transformation. Graduate programs in education, social work, theology, and related fields frequently require praxis components.

Social justice movements utilize praxis through popular education models, community organizing that integrates political education with action, and participatory action research. Study circles, reflection groups, and strategic planning sessions embody praxis by deliberately linking analysis to strategy.

Professional development in fields from nursing to ministry increasingly incorporates reflective practice—a contemporary application of praxis that asks practitioners to systematically examine their work, question assumptions, and refine approaches.

Common Misconceptions

Praxis is not simply “practice” or “putting theory into action.” The term implies a dialectical relationship where action generates theory as much as theory informs action. Praxis emphasizes the reflective human capacity to alter the natural and social world, sheds light on the historical specificity and structural foundations of that world, our ideological formation within it, and the conditions in which antagonisms take root.

Praxis does not prioritize action over contemplation or vice versa. The tension exists precisely in the integration. For Aristotle, praxis or “chosen action” is different because it doesn’t aim at something beyond the activity itself—the activity is the point. The end or purpose of the activity is the activity itself. This distinguishes it from instrumental action aimed at external results.

Praxis is not neutral or apolitical. Particularly in its Marxist, liberationist, and critical pedagogical lineages, praxis explicitly concerns transformation of unjust conditions. However, in Aristotelian and contemplative contexts, praxis may emphasize ethical development and wisdom without necessarily targeting structural change.

Praxis does not guarantee specific outcomes. It describes a process and orientation, not a technique with predictable results. The iterative nature means that understanding and approaches evolve through the cycle itself.

How to Begin

For those approaching praxis from a contemplative or spiritual orientation, begin with paired practices:

Establish a reflective practice: meditation, contemplative prayer, journaling, or other methods that cultivate self-awareness and capacity to witness your own patterns of thought and action.

Engage in concrete service or action: volunteering, community organizing, artistic creation, or other activities that place you in direct relationship with others and the world’s needs.

Create structures for reflection-on-action: After periods of engagement, deliberately examine what occurred. What assumptions did you bring? What did you learn? How does experience challenge or confirm your understanding? What shifts in future action does this reflection suggest?

For deeper study, Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed remains the essential text for understanding praxis in education and liberation. In contemplative contexts, explore resources from the Center for Action and Contemplation or read Cynthia Bourgeault’s work on Centering Prayer and action. In philosophy, begin with Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics (particularly Book VI on practical wisdom) and Marx’s Theses on Feuerbach.

The essential element is not reading about praxis but entering the cycle: reflect, act, reflect again. The understanding emerges through doing.

Related terms

phronesiscontemplationengaged spiritualitysocial justiceembodied practicetransformative learning
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