Lectures on Popular Education ... |
Common terms and phrases
accommodate his conduct acquired adapted advantage animal appears apply Astronomy attain attended boys branches cerning CHARLOTTE SQUARE Chemistry chiefly child communicating condition constitution course Creator cultivated desire direct drawing duty Edinburgh Edinburgh Review enable English enjoyment enlightened evil exer exercise exertion existence extent external feelings female Geology GEORGE COMBE globe gratification Greek and Latin habits human ideas ignorance importance improvement individual industrious classes institutions instruction intellectual faculties intelligence JOHN ROBISON knowl knowledge labor languages laws learned lectures literature means ment moral and intellectual mother Natural Philosophy Natural Theology objects observation organs persons philosophy philosophy of Mind Phrenology physical Physiology place-taking pleasure POPULAR EDUCATION possess practical business present principles prizes proper proportion Prussia pupils pursuits rational refined regard religious render society STUART STREET talent taught teachers teaching things tical tion tivating University of Edinburgh views words young youthful mind
Popular passages
Page 68 - The voluntary outpouring of the public feeling, made to-day, from the North to the South, and from the East to the West, proves this sentiment to be both just and natural.
Page 96 - Delightful task ! to rear the tender thought, And teach the young idea how to shoot...
Page 45 - And though a linguist should pride himself to have all the tongues that Babel cleft the world into, yet if he have not studied the solid things in them as well as the words and lexicons, he were nothing so much to be esteemed a learned man, as any yeoman or tradesman competently wise in his mother dialect only.
Page 45 - that the child should be instructed in the arts which will be useful to the man;" since a finished scholar may emerge from the head of Westminster or Eton in total ignorance of the business and conversation of English gentlemen in the latter end of the eighteenth century.
Page 54 - Nothing has more contributed in this country to disparage the cause of classical education than the rendering it the education of all. That to many this education can be of little or no advantage, is a truth too manifest to be denied ; and on this admission the sophism is natural, to convert " useless to many" into
Page 61 - Prussia, and most other German States, all persons are obliged to send their children to school from the age of seven to thirteen or fourteen years, and the education given to them is excellent; as much superior to anything to be had in this country as it is possible to conceive. This is the sort of interference that we ought gradually to adopt.
Page 16 - From these considerations it appears that species have a real existence in nature, and that each was endowed, at the time of its creation, with the attributes and organization by which it is now distinguished.
Page 17 - There can be no doubt that many plants can adapt themselves to altered conditions, and many animals accommodate themselves to different climates ; but when we view the subject generally, and allow full importance to numerous exceptions, terrestrial plants and animals seem intended to fill the situations they occupy, as these were fitted for them ; they appear created as the coaditions arose, the latter not causing a modification in previously existing forms productive of new species.
Page 14 - Davy, appears to have been a fluid mass, with an immense atmosphere, revolving in space round the sun. By its cooling, a portion of its atmosphere was probably condensed into water, which occupied a part of its surface. In this state, no forms of life, such as now belong to our system, could have inhabited it.
Page 15 - ... become extinct. Five successive races of plants, and four successive races of animals, appear to have been created and swept away by the physical revolutions of the globe, before the system of things became so permanent as to fit the world for man. In none of these formations, .whether called secondary, tertiary, or diluvial, have the fossil remains of man, or any of his works, been discovered. At last, man was created, and since that period there haa been little alteration in the physical circumstances...