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<h2> ON EDUCATION. </h2>
<p>The human intellect is said to be so constituted that <i>general ideas</i>
arise by abstraction from <i>particular observations</i>, and therefore
come after them in point of time. If this is what actually occurs, as
happens in the case of a man who has to depend solely upon his own
experience for what he learns—who has no teacher and no book,—such
a man knows quite well which of his particular observations belong to and
are represented by each of his general ideas. He has a perfect
acquaintance with both sides of his experience, and accordingly, he treats
everything that comes in his way from a right standpoint. This might be
called the <i>natural</i> method of education.</p>
<p>Contrarily, the <i>artificial</i> method is to hear what other people say,
to learn and to read, and so to get your head crammed full of general
ideas before you have any sort of extended acquaintance with the world as
it is, and as you may see it for yourself. You will be told that the
particular observations which go to make these general ideas will come to
you later on in the course of experience; but until that time arrives, you
apply your general ideas wrongly, you judge men and things from a wrong
standpoint, you see them in a wrong light, and treat them in a wrong way.
So it is that education perverts the mind.</p>
<p>This explains why it so frequently happens that, after a long course of
learning and reading, we enter upon the world in our youth, partly with an
artless ignorance of things, partly with wrong notions about them; so that
our demeanor savors at one moment of a nervous anxiety, at another of a
mistaken confidence. The reason of this is simply that our head is full of
general ideas which we are now trying to turn to some use, but which we
hardly ever apply rightly. This is the result of acting in direct
opposition to the natural development of the mind by obtaining general
ideas first, and particular observations last: it is putting the cart
before the horse. Instead of developing the child's own faculties of
discernment, and teaching it to judge and think for itself, the teacher
uses all his energies to stuff its head full of the ready-made thoughts of
other people. The mistaken views of life, which spring from a false
application of general ideas, have afterwards to be corrected by long
years of experience; and it is seldom that they are wholly corrected. This
is why so few men of learning are possessed of common-sense, such as is
often to be met with in people who have had no instruction at all.</p>
<p><i>To acquire a knowledge of the world</i> might be defined as the aim of
all education; and it follows from what I have said that special stress
should be laid upon beginning to acquire this knowledge <i>at the right
end</i>. As I have shown, this means, in the main, that the particular
observation of a thing shall precede the general idea of it; further, that
narrow and circumscribed ideas shall come before ideas of a wide range. It
means, therefore, that the whole system of education shall follow in the
steps that must have been taken by the ideas themselves in the course of
their formation. But whenever any of these steps are skipped or left out,
the instruction is defective, and the ideas obtained are false; and
finally, a distorted view of the world arises, peculiar to the individual
himself—a view such as almost everyone entertains for some time, and
most men for as long as they live. No one can look into his own mind
without seeing that it was only after reaching a very mature age, and in
some cases when he least expected it, that he came to a right
understanding or a clear view of many matters in his life, that, after
all, were not very difficult or complicated. Up till then, they were
points in his knowledge of the world which were still obscure, due to his
having skipped some particular lesson in those early days of his
education, whatever it may have been like—whether artificial and
conventional, or of that natural kind which is based upon individual
experience.</p>
<p>It follows that an attempt should be made to find out the strictly natural
course of knowledge, so that education may proceed methodically by keeping
to it; and that children may become acquainted with the ways of the world,
without getting wrong ideas into their heads, which very often cannot be
got out again. If this plan were adopted, special care would have to be
taken to prevent children from using words without clearly understanding
their meaning and application. The fatal tendency to be satisfied with
words instead of trying to understand things—to learn phrases by
heart, so that they may prove a refuge in time of need, exists, as a rule,
even in children; and the tendency lasts on into manhood, making the
knowledge of many learned persons to consist in mere verbiage.</p>
<p>However, the main endeavor must always be to let particular observations
precede general ideas, and not <i>vice versa</i>, as is usually and
unfortunately the case; as though a child should come feet foremost into
the world, or a verse be begun by writing down the rhyme! The ordinary
method is to imprint ideas and opinions, in the strict sense of the word,
<i>prejudices</i>, on the mind of the child, before it has had any but a
very few particular observations. It is thus that he afterwards comes to
view the world and gather experience through the medium of those
ready-made ideas, rather than to let his ideas be formed for him out of
his own experience of life, as they ought to be.</p>
<p>A man sees a great many things when he looks at the world for himself, and
he sees them from many sides; but this method of learning is not nearly so
short or so quick as the method which employs abstract ideas and makes
hasty generalizations about everything. Experience, therefore, will be a
long time in correcting preconceived ideas, or perhaps never bring its
task to an end; for wherever a man finds that the aspect of things seems
to contradict the general ideas he has formed, he will begin by rejecting
the evidence it offers as partial and one-sided; nay, he will shut his
eyes to it altogether and deny that it stands in any contradiction at all
with his preconceived notions, in order that he may thus preserve them
uninjured. So it is that many a man carries about a burden of wrong
notions all his life long—crotchets, whims, fancies, prejudices,
which at last become fixed ideas. The fact is that he has never tried to
form his fundamental ideas for himself out of his own experience of life,
his own way of looking at the world, because he has taken over his ideas
ready-made from other people; and this it is that makes him—as it
makes how many others!—so shallow and superficial.</p>
<p>Instead of that method of instruction, care should be taken to educate
children on the natural lines. No idea should ever be established in a
child's mind otherwise than by what the child can see for itself, or at
any rate it should be verified by the same means; and the result of this
would be that the child's ideas, if few, would be well-grounded and
accurate. It would learn how to measure things by its own standard rather
than by another's; and so it would escape a thousand strange fancies and
prejudices, and not need to have them eradicated by the lessons it will
subsequently be taught in the school of life. The child would, in this
way, have its mind once for all habituated to clear views and
thorough-going knowledge; it would use its own judgment and take an
unbiased estimate of things.</p>
<p>And, in general, children should not form their notions of what life is
like from the copy before they have learned it from the original, to
whatever aspect of it their attention may be directed. Instead, therefore,
of hastening to place <i>books</i>, and books alone, in their hands, let
them be made acquainted, step by step, with <i>things</i>—with the
actual circumstances of human life. And above all let care be taken to
bring them to a clear and objective view of the world as it is, to educate
them always to derive their ideas directly from real life, and to shape
them in conformity with it—not to fetch them from other sources,
such as books, fairy tales, or what people say—then to apply them
ready-made to real life. For this will mean that their heads are full of
wrong notions, and that they will either see things in a false light or
try in vain to <i>remodel the world</i> to suit their views, and so enter
upon false paths; and that, too, whether they are only constructing
theories of life or engaged in the actual business of it. It is incredible
how much harm is done when the seeds of wrong notions are laid in the mind
in those early years, later on to bear a crop of prejudice; for the
subsequent lessons, which are learned from real life in the world have to
be devoted mainly to their extirpation. <i>To unlearn the evil</i> was the
answer, according to Diogenes Laertius,<SPAN href="#linknote-28"
name="linknoteref-28" id="linknoteref-28">28</SPAN> Antisthenes gave, when he
was asked what branch of knowledge was most necessary; and we can see what
he meant.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-28" id="linknote-28"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
28 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-28">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ vi. 7.]</p>
<p>No child under the age of fifteen should receive instruction in subjects
which may possibly be the vehicle of serious error, such as philosophy,
religion, or any other branch of knowledge where it is necessary to take
large views; because wrong notions imbibed early can seldom be rooted out,
and of all the intellectual faculties, judgment is the last to arrive at
maturity. The child should give its attention either to subjects where no
error is possible at all, such as mathematics, or to those in which there
is no particular danger in making a mistake, such as languages, natural
science, history and so on. And in general, the branches of knowledge
which are to be studied at any period of life should be such as the mind
is equal to at that period and can perfectly understand. Childhood and
youth form the time for collecting materials, for getting a special and
thorough knowledge of the individual and particular things. In those years
it is too early to form views on a large scale; and ultimate explanations
must be put off to a later date. The faculty of judgment, which cannot
come into play without mature experience, should be left to itself; and
care should be taken not to anticipate its action by inculcating
prejudice, which will paralyze it for ever.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the memory should be specially taxed in youth, since it
is then that it is strongest and most tenacious. But in choosing the
things that should be committed to memory the utmost care and forethought
must be exercised; as lessons well learnt in youth are never forgotten.
This precious soil must therefore be cultivated so as to bear as much
fruit as possible. If you think how deeply rooted in your memory are those
persons whom you knew in the first twelve years of your life, how
indelible the impression made upon you by the events of those years, how
clear your recollection of most of the things that happened to you then,
most of what was told or taught you, it will seem a natural thing to take
the susceptibility and tenacity of the mind at that period as the
ground-work of education. This may be done by a strict observance of
method, and a systematic regulation of the impressions which the mind is
to receive.</p>
<p>But the years of youth allotted to a man are short, and memory is, in
general, bound within narrow limits; still more so, the memory of any one
individual. Since this is the case, it is all-important to fill the memory
with what is essential and material in any branch of knowledge, to the
exclusion of everything else. The decision as to what is essential and
material should rest with the masterminds in every department of thought;
their choice should be made after the most mature deliberation, and the
outcome of it fixed and determined. Such a choice would have to proceed by
sifting the things which it is necessary and important for a man to know
in general, and then, necessary and important for him to know in any
particular business or calling. Knowledge of the first kind would have to
be classified, after an encyclopaedic fashion, in graduated courses,
adapted to the degree of general culture which a man may be expected to
have in the circumstances in which he is placed; beginning with a course
limited to the necessary requirements of primary education, and extending
upwards to the subjects treated of in all the branches of philosophical
thought. The regulation of the second kind of knowledge would be left to
those who had shown genuine mastery in the several departments into which
it is divided; and the whole system would provide an elaborate rule or
canon for intellectual education, which would, of course, have to be
revised every ten years. Some such arrangement as this would employ the
youthful power of the memory to best advantage, and supply excellent
working material to the faculty of judgment, when it made its appearance
later on.</p>
<p>A man's knowledge may be said to be mature, in other words, it has reached
the most complete state of perfection to which he, as an individual, is
capable of bringing it, when an exact correspondence is established
between the whole of his abstract ideas and the things he has actually
perceived for himself. This will mean that each of his abstract ideas
rests, directly or indirectly, upon a basis of observation, which alone
endows it with any real value; and also that he is able to place every
observation he makes under the right abstract idea which belongs to it.
Maturity is the work of experience alone; and therefore it requires time.
The knowledge we derive from our own observation is usually distinct from
that which we acquire through the medium of abstract ideas; the one coming
to us in the natural way, the other by what people tell us, and the course
of instruction we receive, whether it is good or bad. The result is, that
in youth there is generally very little agreement or correspondence
between our abstract ideas, which are merely phrases in the mind, and that
real knowledge which we have obtained by our own observation. It is only
later on that a gradual approach takes place between these two kinds of
knowledge, accompanied by a mutual correction of error; and knowledge is
not mature until this coalition is accomplished. This maturity or
perfection of knowledge is something quite independent of another kind of
perfection, which may be of a high or a low order—the perfection, I
mean, to which a man may bring his own individual faculties; which is
measured, not by any correspondence between the two kinds of knowledge,
but by the degree of intensity which each kind attains.</p>
<p>For the practical man the most needful thing is to acquire an accurate and
profound knowledge of <i>the ways of the world</i>. But this, though the
most needful, is also the most wearisome of all studies, as a man may
reach a great age without coming to the end of his task; whereas, in the
domain of the sciences, he masters the more important facts when he is
still young. In acquiring that knowledge of the world, it is while he is a
novice, namely, in boyhood and in youth, that the first and hardest
lessons are put before him; but it often happens that even in later years
there is still a great deal to be learned.</p>
<p>The study is difficult enough in itself; but the difficulty is doubled by
<i>novels</i>, which represent a state of things in life and the world,
such as, in fact, does not exist. Youth is credulous, and accepts these
views of life, which then become part and parcel of the mind; so that,
instead of a merely negative condition of ignorance, you have positive
error—a whole tissue of false notions to start with; and at a later
date these actually spoil the schooling of experience, and put a wrong
construction on the lessons it teaches. If, before this, the youth had no
light at all to guide him, he is now misled by a will-o'-the-wisp; still
more often is this the case with a girl. They have both had a false view
of things foisted on them by reading novels; and expectations have been
aroused which can never be fulfilled. This generally exercises a baneful
influence on their whole life. In this respect those whose youth has
allowed them no time or opportunity for reading novels—those who
work with their hands and the like—are in a position of decided
advantage. There are a few novels to which this reproach cannot be
addressed—nay, which have an effect the contrary of bad. First and
foremost, to give an example, <i>Gil Blas</i>, and the other works of Le
Sage (or rather their Spanish originals); further, <i>The Vicar of
Wakefield</i>, and, to some extent Sir Walter Scott's novels. <i>Don
Quixote</i> may be regarded as a satirical exhibition of the error to
which I am referring.</p>
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