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<h2> Chapter Twenty-Three: Vocational Aspects of Education </h2>
<p>1. The Meaning of Vocation. At the present time the conflict of
philosophic theories focuses in discussion of the proper place and
function of vocational factors in education. The bald statement that
significant differences in fundamental philosophical conceptions find
their chief issue in connection with this point may arouse incredulity:
there seems to be too great a gap between the remote and general terms in
which philosophic ideas are formulated and the practical and concrete
details of vocational education. But a mental review of the intellectual
presuppositions underlying the oppositions in education of labor and
leisure, theory and practice, body and mind, mental states and the world,
will show that they culminate in the antithesis of vocational and cultural
education. Traditionally, liberal culture has been linked to the notions
of leisure, purely contemplative knowledge and a spiritual activity not
involving the active use of bodily organs. Culture has also tended,
latterly, to be associated with a purely private refinement, a cultivation
of certain states and attitudes of consciousness, separate from either
social direction or service. It has been an escape from the former, and a
solace for the necessity of the latter.</p>
<p>So deeply entangled are these philosophic dualisms with the whole subject
of vocational education, that it is necessary to define the meaning of
vocation with some fullness in order to avoid the impression that an
education which centers about it is narrowly practical, if not merely
pecuniary. A vocation means nothing but such a direction of life
activities as renders them perceptibly significant to a person, because of
the consequences they accomplish, and also useful to his associates. The
opposite of a career is neither leisure nor culture, but aimlessness,
capriciousness, the absence of cumulative achievement in experience, on
the personal side, and idle display, parasitic dependence upon the others,
on the social side. Occupation is a concrete term for continuity. It
includes the development of artistic capacity of any kind, of special
scientific ability, of effective citizenship, as well as professional and
business occupations, to say nothing of mechanical labor or engagement in
gainful pursuits.</p>
<p>We must avoid not only limitation of conception of vocation to the
occupations where immediately tangible commodities are produced, but also
the notion that vocations are distributed in an exclusive way, one and
only one to each person. Such restricted specialism is impossible; nothing
could be more absurd than to try to educate individuals with an eye to
only one line of activity. In the first place, each individual has of
necessity a variety of callings, in each of which he should be
intelligently effective; and in the second place any one occupation loses
its meaning and becomes a routine keeping busy at something in the degree
in which it is isolated from other interests. (i) No one is just an artist
and nothing else, and in so far as one approximates that condition, he is
so much the less developed human being; he is a kind of monstrosity. He
must, at some period of his life, be a member of a family; he must have
friends and companions; he must either support himself or be supported by
others, and thus he has a business career. He is a member of some
organized political unit, and so on. We naturally name his vocation from
that one of the callings which distinguishes him, rather than from those
which he has in common with all others. But we should not allow ourselves
to be so subject to words as to ignore and virtually deny his other
callings when it comes to a consideration of the vocational phases of
education.</p>
<p>(ii) As a man's vocation as artist is but the emphatically specialized
phase of his diverse and variegated vocational activities, so his
efficiency in it, in the humane sense of efficiency, is determined by its
association with other callings. A person must have experience, he must
live, if his artistry is to be more than a technical accomplishment. He
cannot find the subject matter of his artistic activity within his art;
this must be an expression of what he suffers and enjoys in other
relationships—a thing which depends in turn upon the alertness and
sympathy of his interests. What is true of an artist is true of any other
special calling. There is doubtless—in general accord with the
principle of habit—a tendency for every distinctive vocation to
become too dominant, too exclusive and absorbing in its specialized
aspect. This means emphasis upon skill or technical method at the expense
of meaning. Hence it is not the business of education to foster this
tendency, but rather to safeguard against it, so that the scientific
inquirer shall not be merely the scientist, the teacher merely the
pedagogue, the clergyman merely one who wears the cloth, and so on.</p>
<p>2. The Place of Vocational Aims in Education. Bearing in mind the varied
and connected content of the vocation, and the broad background upon which
a particular calling is projected, we shall now consider education for the
more distinctive activity of an individual.</p>
<p>1. An occupation is the only thing which balances the distinctive capacity
of an individual with his social service. To find out what one is fitted
to do and to secure an opportunity to do it is the key to happiness.
Nothing is more tragic than failure to discover one's true business in
life, or to find that one has drifted or been forced by circumstance into
an uncongenial calling. A right occupation means simply that the aptitudes
of a person are in adequate play, working with the minimum of friction and
the maximum of satisfaction. With reference to other members of a
community, this adequacy of action signifies, of course, that they are
getting the best service the person can render. It is generally believed,
for example, that slave labor was ultimately wasteful even from the purely
economic point of view—that there was not sufficient stimulus to
direct the energies of slaves, and that there was consequent wastage.
Moreover, since slaves were confined to certain prescribed callings, much
talent must have remained unavailable to the community, and hence there
was a dead loss. Slavery only illustrates on an obvious scale what happens
in some degree whenever an individual does not find himself in his work.
And he cannot completely find himself when vocations are looked upon with
contempt, and a conventional ideal of a culture which is essentially the
same for all is maintained. Plato (ante, p. 88) laid down the fundamental
principle of a philosophy of education when he asserted that it was the
business of education to discover what each person is good for, and to
train him to mastery of that mode of excellence, because such development
would also secure the fulfillment of social needs in the most harmonious
way. His error was not in qualitative principle, but in his limited
conception of the scope of vocations socially needed; a limitation of
vision which reacted to obscure his perception of the infinite variety of
capacities found in different individuals.</p>
<p>2. An occupation is a continuous activity having a purpose. Education
through occupations consequently combines within itself more of the
factors conducive to learning than any other method. It calls instincts
and habits into play; it is a foe to passive receptivity. It has an end in
view; results are to be accomplished. Hence it appeals to thought; it
demands that an idea of an end be steadily maintained, so that activity
cannot be either routine or capricious. Since the movement of activity
must be progressive, leading from one stage to another, observation and
ingenuity are required at each stage to overcome obstacles and to discover
and readapt means of execution. In short, an occupation, pursued under
conditions where the realization of the activity rather than merely the
external product is the aim, fulfills the requirements which were laid
down earlier in connection with the discussion of aims, interest, and
thinking. (See Chapters VIII, X, XII.)</p>
<p>A calling is also of necessity an organizing principle for information and
ideas; for knowledge and intellectual growth. It provides an axis which
runs through an immense diversity of detail; it causes different
experiences, facts, items of information to fall into order with one
another. The lawyer, the physician, the laboratory investigator in some
branch of chemistry, the parent, the citizen interested in his own
locality, has a constant working stimulus to note and relate whatever has
to do with his concern. He unconsciously, from the motivation of his
occupation, reaches out for all relevant information, and holds to it. The
vocation acts as both magnet to attract and as glue to hold. Such
organization of knowledge is vital, because it has reference to needs; it
is so expressed and readjusted in action that it never becomes stagnant.
No classification, no selection and arrangement of facts, which is
consciously worked out for purely abstract ends, can ever compare in
solidity or effectiveness with that knit under the stress of an
occupation; in comparison the former sort is formal, superficial, and
cold.</p>
<p>3. The only adequate training for occupations is training through
occupations. The principle stated early in this book (see Chapter VI) that
the educative process is its own end, and that the only sufficient
preparation for later responsibilities comes by making the most of
immediately present life, applies in full force to the vocational phases
of education. The dominant vocation of all human beings at all times is
living—intellectual and moral growth. In childhood and youth, with
their relative freedom from economic stress, this fact is naked and
unconcealed. To predetermine some future occupation for which education is
to be a strict preparation is to injure the possibilities of present
development and thereby to reduce the adequacy of preparation for a future
right employment. To repeat the principle we have had occasion to appeal
to so often, such training may develop a machine-like skill in routine
lines (it is far from being sure to do so, since it may develop distaste,
aversion, and carelessness), but it will be at the expense of those
qualities of alert observation and coherent and ingenious planning which
make an occupation intellectually rewarding. In an autocratically managed
society, it is often a conscious object to prevent the development of
freedom and responsibility, a few do the planning and ordering, the others
follow directions and are deliberately confined to narrow and prescribed
channels of endeavor. However much such a scheme may inure to the prestige
and profit of a class, it is evident that it limits the development of the
subject class; hardens and confines the opportunities for learning through
experience of the master class, and in both ways hampers the life of the
society as a whole. (See ante, p. 260.)</p>
<p>The only alternative is that all the earlier preparation for vocations be
indirect rather than direct; namely, through engaging in those active
occupations which are indicated by the needs and interests of the pupil at
the time. Only in this way can there be on the part of the educator and of
the one educated a genuine discovery of personal aptitudes so that the
proper choice of a specialized pursuit in later life may be indicated.
Moreover, the discovery of capacity and aptitude will be a constant
process as long as growth continues. It is a conventional and arbitrary
view which assumes that discovery of the work to be chosen for adult life
is made once for all at some particular date. One has discovered in
himself, say, an interest, intellectual and social, in the things which
have to do with engineering and has decided to make that his calling. At
most, this only blocks out in outline the field in which further growth is
to be directed. It is a sort of rough sketch for use in direction of
further activities. It is the discovery of a profession in the sense in
which Columbus discovered America when he touched its shores. Future
explorations of an indefinitely more detailed and extensive sort remain to
be made. When educators conceive vocational guidance as something which
leads up to a definitive, irretrievable, and complete choice, both
education and the chosen vocation are likely to be rigid, hampering
further growth. In so far, the calling chosen will be such as to leave the
person concerned in a permanently subordinate position, executing the
intelligence of others who have a calling which permits more flexible play
and readjustment. And while ordinary usages of language may not justify
terming a flexible attitude of readjustment a choice of a new and further
calling, it is such in effect. If even adults have to be on the lookout to
see that their calling does not shut down on them and fossilize them,
educators must certainly be careful that the vocational preparation of
youth is such as to engage them in a continuous reorganization of aims and
methods.</p>
<p>3. Present Opportunities and Dangers. In the past, education has been much
more vocational in fact than in name. (i) The education of the masses was
distinctly utilitarian. It was called apprenticeship rather than
education, or else just learning from experience. The schools devoted
themselves to the three R's in the degree in which ability to go through
the forms of reading, writing, and figuring were common elements in all
kinds of labor. Taking part in some special line of work, under the
direction of others, was the out-of-school phase of this education. The
two supplemented each other; the school work in its narrow and formal
character was as much a part of apprenticeship to a calling as that
explicitly so termed.</p>
<p>(ii) To a considerable extent, the education of the dominant classes was
essentially vocational—it only happened that their pursuits of
ruling and of enjoying were not called professions. For only those things
were named vocations or employments which involved manual labor, laboring
for a reward in keep, or its commuted money equivalent, or the rendering
of personal services to specific persons. For a long time, for example,
the profession of the surgeon and physician ranked almost with that of the
valet or barber—partly because it had so much to do with the body,
and partly because it involved rendering direct service for pay to some
definite person. But if we go behind words, the business of directing
social concerns, whether politically or economically, whether in war or
peace, is as much a calling as anything else; and where education has not
been completely under the thumb of tradition, higher schools in the past
have been upon the whole calculated to give preparation for this business.
Moreover, display, the adornment of person, the kind of social
companionship and entertainment which give prestige, and the spending of
money, have been made into definite callings. Unconsciously to themselves
the higher institutions of learning have been made to contribute to
preparation for these employments. Even at present, what is called higher
education is for a certain class (much smaller than it once was) mainly
preparation for engaging effectively in these pursuits.</p>
<p>In other respects, it is largely, especially in the most advanced work,
training for the calling of teaching and special research. By a peculiar
superstition, education which has to do chiefly with preparation for the
pursuit of conspicuous idleness, for teaching, and for literary callings,
and for leadership, has been regarded as non-vocational and even as
peculiarly cultural. The literary training which indirectly fits for
authorship, whether of books, newspaper editorials, or magazine articles,
is especially subject to this superstition: many a teacher and author
writes and argues in behalf of a cultural and humane education against the
encroachments of a specialized practical education, without recognizing
that his own education, which he calls liberal, has been mainly training
for his own particular calling. He has simply got into the habit of
regarding his own business as essentially cultural and of overlooking the
cultural possibilities of other employments. At the bottom of these
distinctions is undoubtedly the tradition which recognizes as employment
only those pursuits where one is responsible for his work to a specific
employer, rather than to the ultimate employer, the community.</p>
<p>There are, however, obvious causes for the present conscious emphasis upon
vocational education—for the disposition to make explicit and
deliberate vocational implications previously tacit. (i) In the first
place, there is an increased esteem, in democratic communities, of
whatever has to do with manual labor, commercial occupations, and the
rendering of tangible services to society. In theory, men and women are
now expected to do something in return for their support—intellectual
and economic—by society. Labor is extolled; service is a much-lauded
moral ideal. While there is still much admiration and envy of those who
can pursue lives of idle conspicuous display, better moral sentiment
condemns such lives. Social responsibility for the use of time and
personal capacity is more generally recognized than it used to be.</p>
<p>(ii) In the second place, those vocations which are specifically
industrial have gained tremendously in importance in the last century and
a half. Manufacturing and commerce are no longer domestic and local, and
consequently more or less incidental, but are world-wide. They engage the
best energies of an increasingly large number of persons. The
manufacturer, banker, and captain of industry have practically displaced a
hereditary landed gentry as the immediate directors of social affairs. The
problem of social readjustment is openly industrial, having to do with the
relations of capital and labor. The great increase in the social
importance of conspicuous industrial processes has inevitably brought to
the front questions having to do with the relationship of schooling to
industrial life. No such vast social readjustment could occur without
offering a challenge to an education inherited from different social
conditions, and without putting up to education new problems.</p>
<p>(iii) In the third place, there is the fact already repeatedly mentioned:
Industry has ceased to be essentially an empirical, rule-of-thumb
procedure, handed down by custom. Its technique is now technological: that
is to say, based upon machinery resulting from discoveries in mathematics,
physics, chemistry, bacteriology, etc. The economic revolution has
stimulated science by setting problems for solution, by producing greater
intellectual respect for mechanical appliances. And industry received back
payment from science with compound interest. As a consequence, industrial
occupations have infinitely greater intellectual content and infinitely
larger cultural possibilities than they used to possess. The demand for
such education as will acquaint workers with the scientific and social
bases and bearings of their pursuits becomes imperative, since those who
are without it inevitably sink to the role of appendages to the machines
they operate. Under the old regime all workers in a craft were
approximately equals in their knowledge and outlook. Personal knowledge
and ingenuity were developed within at least a narrow range, because work
was done with tools under the direct command of the worker. Now the
operator has to adjust himself to his machine, instead of his tool to his
own purposes. While the intellectual possibilities of industry have
multiplied, industrial conditions tend to make industry, for great masses,
less of an educative resource than it was in the days of hand production
for local markets. The burden of realizing the intellectual possibilities
inhering in work is thus thrown back on the school.</p>
<p>(iv) In the fourth place, the pursuit of knowledge has become, in science,
more experimental, less dependent upon literary tradition, and less
associated with dialectical methods of reasoning, and with symbols. As a
result, the subject matter of industrial occupation presents not only more
of the content of science than it used to, but greater opportunity for
familiarity with the method by which knowledge is made. The ordinary
worker in the factory is of course under too immediate economic pressure
to have a chance to produce a knowledge like that of the worker in the
laboratory. But in schools, association with machines and industrial
processes may be had under conditions where the chief conscious concern of
the students is insight. The separation of shop and laboratory, where
these conditions are fulfilled, is largely conventional, the laboratory
having the advantage of permitting the following up of any intellectual
interest a problem may suggest; the shop the advantage of emphasizing the
social bearings of the scientific principle, as well as, with many pupils,
of stimulating a livelier interest.</p>
<p>(v) Finally, the advances which have been made in the psychology of
learning in general and of childhood in particular fall into line with the
increased importance of industry in life. For modern psychology emphasizes
the radical importance of primitive unlearned instincts of exploring,
experimentation, and "trying on." It reveals that learning is not the work
of something ready-made called mind, but that mind itself is an
organization of original capacities into activities having significance.
As we have already seen (ante, p. 204), in older pupils work is to
educative development of raw native activities what play is for younger
pupils. Moreover, the passage from play to work should be gradual, not
involving a radical change of attitude but carrying into work the elements
of play, plus continuous reorganization in behalf of greater control. The
reader will remark that these five points practically resume the main
contentions of the previous part of the work. Both practically and
philosophically, the key to the present educational situation lies in a
gradual reconstruction of school materials and methods so as to utilize
various forms of occupation typifying social callings, and to bring out
their intellectual and moral content. This reconstruction must relegate
purely literary methods—including textbooks—and dialectical
methods to the position of necessary auxiliary tools in the intelligent
development of consecutive and cumulative activities.</p>
<p>But our discussion has emphasized the fact that this educational
reorganization cannot be accomplished by merely trying to give a technical
preparation for industries and professions as they now operate, much less
by merely reproducing existing industrial conditions in the school. The
problem is not that of making the schools an adjunct to manufacture and
commerce, but of utilizing the factors of industry to make school life
more active, more full of immediate meaning, more connected with
out-of-school experience. The problem is not easy of solution. There is a
standing danger that education will perpetuate the older traditions for a
select few, and effect its adjustment to the newer economic conditions
more or less on the basis of acquiescence in the untransformed,
unrationalized, and unsocialized phases of our defective industrial
regime. Put in concrete terms, there is danger that vocational education
will be interpreted in theory and practice as trade education: as a means
of securing technical efficiency in specialized future pursuits. Education
would then become an instrument of perpetuating unchanged the existing
industrial order of society, instead of operating as a means of its
transformation. The desired transformation is not difficult to define in a
formal way. It signifies a society in which every person shall be occupied
in something which makes the lives of others better worth living, and
which accordingly makes the ties which bind persons together more
perceptible—which breaks down the barriers of distance between them.
It denotes a state of affairs in which the interest of each in his work is
uncoerced and intelligent: based upon its congeniality to his own
aptitudes. It goes without saying that we are far from such a social
state; in a literal and quantitative sense, we may never arrive at it. But
in principle, the quality of social changes already accomplished lies in
this direction. There are more ample resources for its achievement now
than ever there have been before. No insuperable obstacles, given the
intelligent will for its realization, stand in the way.</p>
<p>Success or failure in its realization depends more upon the adoption of
educational methods calculated to effect the change than upon anything
else. For the change is essentially a change in the quality of mental
disposition—an educative change. This does not mean that we can
change character and mind by direct instruction and exhortation, apart
from a change in industrial and political conditions. Such a conception
contradicts our basic idea that character and mind are attitudes of
participative response in social affairs. But it does mean that we may
produce in schools a projection in type of the society we should like to
realize, and by forming minds in accord with it gradually modify the
larger and more recalcitrant features of adult society. Sentimentally, it
may seem harsh to say that the greatest evil of the present regime is not
found in poverty and in the suffering which it entails, but in the fact
that so many persons have callings which make no appeal to them, which are
pursued simply for the money reward that accrues. For such callings
constantly provoke one to aversion, ill will, and a desire to slight and
evade. Neither men's hearts nor their minds are in their work. On the
other hand, those who are not only much better off in worldly goods, but
who are in excessive, if not monopolistic, control of the activities of
the many are shut off from equality and generality of social intercourse.
They are stimulated to pursuits of indulgence and display; they try to
make up for the distance which separates them from others by the
impression of force and superior possession and enjoyment which they can
make upon others.</p>
<p>It would be quite possible for a narrowly conceived scheme of vocational
education to perpetuate this division in a hardened form. Taking its stand
upon a dogma of social predestination, it would assume that some are to
continue to be wage earners under economic conditions like the present,
and would aim simply to give them what is termed a trade education—that
is, greater technical efficiency. Technical proficiency is often sadly
lacking, and is surely desirable on all accounts—not merely for the
sake of the production of better goods at less cost, but for the greater
happiness found in work. For no one cares for what one cannot half do. But
there is a great difference between a proficiency limited to immediate
work, and a competency extended to insight into its social bearings;
between efficiency in carrying out the plans of others and in one forming
one's own. At present, intellectual and emotional limitation characterizes
both the employing and the employed class. While the latter often have no
concern with their occupation beyond the money return it brings, the
former's outlook may be confined to profit and power. The latter interest
generally involves much greater intellectual initiation and larger survey
of conditions. For it involves the direction and combination of a large
number of diverse factors, while the interest in wages is restricted to
certain direct muscular movements. But none the less there is a limitation
of intelligence to technical and non-humane, non-liberal channels, so far
as the work does not take in its social bearings. And when the animating
motive is desire for private profit or personal power, this limitation is
inevitable. In fact, the advantage in immediate social sympathy and humane
disposition often lies with the economically unfortunate, who have not
experienced the hardening effects of a one-sided control of the affairs of
others.</p>
<p>Any scheme for vocational education which takes its point of departure
from the industrial regime that now exists, is likely to assume and to
perpetuate its divisions and weaknesses, and thus to become an instrument
in accomplishing the feudal dogma of social predestination. Those who are
in a position to make their wishes good, will demand a liberal, a cultural
occupation, and one which fits for directive power the youth in whom they
are directly interested. To split the system, and give to others, less
fortunately situated, an education conceived mainly as specific trade
preparation, is to treat the schools as an agency for transferring the
older division of labor and leisure, culture and service, mind and body,
directed and directive class, into a society nominally democratic. Such a
vocational education inevitably discounts the scientific and historic
human connections of the materials and processes dealt with. To include
such things in narrow trade education would be to waste time; concern for
them would not be "practical." They are reserved for those who have
leisure at command—the leisure due to superior economic resources.
Such things might even be dangerous to the interests of the controlling
class, arousing discontent or ambitions "beyond the station" of those
working under the direction of others. But an education which acknowledges
the full intellectual and social meaning of a vocation would include
instruction in the historic background of present conditions; training in
science to give intelligence and initiative in dealing with material and
agencies of production; and study of economics, civics, and politics, to
bring the future worker into touch with the problems of the day and the
various methods proposed for its improvement. Above all, it would train
power of readaptation to changing conditions so that future workers would
not become blindly subject to a fate imposed upon them. This ideal has to
contend not only with the inertia of existing educational traditions, but
also with the opposition of those who are entrenched in command of the
industrial machinery, and who realize that such an educational system if
made general would threaten their ability to use others for their own
ends. But this very fact is the presage of a more equitable and
enlightened social order, for it gives evidence of the dependence of
social reorganization upon educational reconstruction. It is accordingly
an encouragement to those believing in a better order to undertake the
promotion of a vocational education which does not subject youth to the
demands and standards of the present system, but which utilizes its
scientific and social factors to develop a courageous intelligence, and to
make intelligence practical and executive.</p>
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<h2> Summary. A vocation signifies any form of continuous activity which </h2>
<p>renders service to others and engages personal powers in behalf of the
accomplishment of results. The question of the relation of vocation to
education brings to a focus the various problems previously discussed
regarding the connection of thought with bodily activity; of individual
conscious development with associated life; of theoretical culture with
practical behavior having definite results; of making a livelihood with
the worthy enjoyment of leisure. In general, the opposition to recognition
of the vocational phases of life in education (except for the utilitarian
three R's in elementary schooling) accompanies the conservation of
aristocratic ideals of the past. But, at the present juncture, there is a
movement in behalf of something called vocational training which, if
carried into effect, would harden these ideas into a form adapted to the
existing industrial regime. This movement would continue the traditional
liberal or cultural education for the few economically able to enjoy it,
and would give to the masses a narrow technical trade education for
specialized callings, carried on under the control of others. This scheme
denotes, of course, simply a perpetuation of the older social division,
with its counterpart intellectual and moral dualisms. But it means its
continuation under conditions where it has much less justification for
existence. For industrial life is now so dependent upon science and so
intimately affects all forms of social intercourse, that there is an
opportunity to utilize it for development of mind and character. Moreover,
a right educational use of it would react upon intelligence and interest
so as to modify, in connection with legislation and administration, the
socially obnoxious features of the present industrial and commercial
order. It would turn the increasing fund of social sympathy to
constructive account, instead of leaving it a somewhat blind philanthropic
sentiment.</p>
<p>It would give those who engage in industrial callings desire and ability
to share in social control, and ability to become masters of their
industrial fate. It would enable them to saturate with meaning the
technical and mechanical features which are so marked a feature of our
machine system of production and distribution. So much for those who now
have the poorer economic opportunities. With the representatives of the
more privileged portion of the community, it would increase sympathy for
labor, create a disposition of mind which can discover the culturing
elements in useful activity, and increase a sense of social
responsibility. The crucial position of the question of vocational
education at present is due, in other words, to the fact that it
concentrates in a specific issue two fundamental questions:—Whether
intelligence is best exercised apart from or within activity which puts
nature to human use, and whether individual culture is best secured under
egoistic or social conditions. No discussion of details is undertaken in
this chapter, because this conclusion but summarizes the discussion of the
previous chapters, XV to XXII, inclusive.</p>
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