The Culture Demanded by Modern Life;D. Appleton & Company, 1867 - 492 pages |
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Page 3
... called the Trivium ; and the remaining four , Arithmetic , Geometry , Astronomy , and Music ( the latter as a branch of Arithmetic ) , formed the Quadrivium . This scheme has been handed down from age to age , and with but slight ...
... called the Trivium ; and the remaining four , Arithmetic , Geometry , Astronomy , and Music ( the latter as a branch of Arithmetic ) , formed the Quadrivium . This scheme has been handed down from age to age , and with but slight ...
Page 7
... called the grammar of the English language , there are two elements . There is something professed to be taught which is not ; and there is something which , from being already learned better than any man can teach it , requires no ...
... called the grammar of the English language , there are two elements . There is something professed to be taught which is not ; and there is something which , from being already learned better than any man can teach it , requires no ...
Page 28
... called into higher action . The abstraction of a common law from many facts , while it relieves the memory of the burden of a large portion of them , makes a greater demand upon the understanding . In proportion as knowledge is ...
... called into higher action . The abstraction of a common law from many facts , while it relieves the memory of the burden of a large portion of them , makes a greater demand upon the understanding . In proportion as knowledge is ...
Page 32
... called , by simple apprehension - that we depend for almost all our valuable knowledge , on evidence external to itself ; and most of us are very unsafe hands at estimating evidence , where an appeal cannot be made to actual eyesight ...
... called , by simple apprehension - that we depend for almost all our valuable knowledge , on evidence external to itself ; and most of us are very unsafe hands at estimating evidence , where an appeal cannot be made to actual eyesight ...
Page 33
... called our experience , such prosperity as we enjoy might be owing to a hundred other causes , and might have been obstructed , not promoted , by these . true political science is , in one sense of the phrase , a priori , being deduced ...
... called our experience , such prosperity as we enjoy might be owing to a hundred other causes , and might have been obstructed , not promoted , by these . true political science is , in one sense of the phrase , a priori , being deduced ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract acquired acquisition action animals application Aristotle attainment become body botany brain branches called cation character classical course cultivated culture deductive reasoning degree depends Descartes discovery Economic Science exercise existence experience facts faculties force geometry give Greece Greek habit HERBERT SPENCER higher human ideas ignorance important impressions induction industry inquiry instruction intel intellectual judgment kind knowledge labour language laws learned lectures less living lobster logic mathematics matter means ment mental discipline method mind mode muscles natural history natural science notion objects observation organic phenomena philosophy physical science physiology Plato practical present primary education principles produce progress quackery question reason reflex action regard relations schools scientific sense society Socrates speak species student study of Physics suppose table-turners taught teachers teaching things thought tion true truth universe zoology
Popular passages
Page 60 - Onward and on, the eternal Pan Who layeth the world's incessant plan, Halteth never in one shape, But forever doth escape, Like wave or flame, into new forms Of gem, and air, of plants, and worms.
Page 383 - I keep the subject constantly before me, and wait till the first dawnings open slowly by little and little into a full and clear light.
Page 216 - The world little knows how many of the thoughts and theories which have passed through the mind of a scientific investigator have been crushed in silence and secrecy by his own severe criticism and adverse examination ; that in the most successful instances not a tenth of the suggestions, the hopes, the wishes, the preliminary conclusions have been realized.
Page 48 - For many years it has been one of my constant regrets that no schoolmaster of mine had a knowledge of natural history, so far, at least, as to have taught me the grasses that grow by the wayside, and the little winged and wingless neighbors that are continually meeting me with a salutation which I cannot answer, as things are!
Page 33 - All true political science is, in one sense of the phrase, a priori, being deduced from the tendencies of things, tendencies known either through our general experience of human nature, or as the result of an analysis of the course of history, considered as a progressive evolution.
Page 213 - ... says the same scientist; and further quotes the noble words of Faraday —"occasionally, and frequently the exercise of the judgment ought to end in absolute reservation. It may be very distasteful and a great fatigue to suspend a conclusion, but as we are not infallible, so we ought to be cautious.
Page xii - If we consult reason, experience, and the common testimony of ancient and modern times, none of our intellectual studies tend to cultivate a smaller number of the faculties, in a more partial or feeble manner, than mathematics.
Page 40 - ... at all, it is worth studying scientifically, so as to reach the fundamental laws which underlie and govern all the rest. With regard to the suitableness of this subject for general education, a distinction must be made. There are certain observed laws of our thoughts and of our feelings which rest upon experimental evidence, and, once seized, are a clue to the interpretation of much that we are conscious of in ourselves, and observe in one another. Such, for example, are the laws of association....
Page 289 - They know not how to spend their time (disports excepted, which are all their business), what to do, or otherwise how to bestow themselves ; like our modern Frenchmen, that had rather lose a pound of blood in a single combat, than a drop of sweat in any honest labour.
Page 30 - Do we not feel that he who is totally ignorant of these things, let him be ever so skilled in a special profession, is not an educated man, but an ignoramus? It is surely no small part of education to put us in intelligent possession of the most important and most universally interesting facts of the universe, so that the world which surrounds us may not be a sealed book to us, uninteresting because unintelligible. This, however, is but the simplest and most obvious part of the utility of science,...