Letters on the Elementary Principles of Education, Volume 2This work presents a series of letters by the author which address education principles. The letters explore the topics of: perception, attention, conception, judgment, imagination & taste abstraction, and reflection. The author's first letter discusses the necessity of obtaining a knowledge of our intellectual faculties, and how this knowledge is acquired. A short analysis of the plan to be pursued is also included. |
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Page 7
... mind ; we may give our children knowledge , we may give them learning , we may give them ac- complishments , but we shall never be able to teach them to apply these acquirements to just or noble purposes . I assume it as an ...
... mind ; we may give our children knowledge , we may give them learning , we may give them ac- complishments , but we shall never be able to teach them to apply these acquirements to just or noble purposes . I assume it as an ...
Page 10
Elizabeth Hamilton. invariably mean that faculty of the mind whereby we are enabled to perceive , and to feel ... mind susceptible of the emotions of sub- limity or beauty , are equally necessary to the imagination . An early and ...
Elizabeth Hamilton. invariably mean that faculty of the mind whereby we are enabled to perceive , and to feel ... mind susceptible of the emotions of sub- limity or beauty , are equally necessary to the imagination . An early and ...
Page 11
... mind has obtained few accurate ideas , and the judgment has been but little exercised . The imagination that is not regulated by judgment , is pernicious in exact pro- portion to its strength . It presents to the mind's 11.
... mind has obtained few accurate ideas , and the judgment has been but little exercised . The imagination that is not regulated by judgment , is pernicious in exact pro- portion to its strength . It presents to the mind's 11.
Page 13
... minds have never been ex- ercised on truth ? Where the judgment has not been duly cultivated , it is in vain that we endeavour to lead the mind to general reasoning ; on such minds , the sciences that afford the most powerful aid to the ...
... minds have never been ex- ercised on truth ? Where the judgment has not been duly cultivated , it is in vain that we endeavour to lead the mind to general reasoning ; on such minds , the sciences that afford the most powerful aid to the ...
Page 19
... mind , that we should devote ourselves to the improvement of each faculty , in the order it is by her presented . Assuming this as a principle , I shall pro- ceed in the following Letters to examine , in the first place , the faculty of ...
... mind , that we should devote ourselves to the improvement of each faculty , in the order it is by her presented . Assuming this as a principle , I shall pro- ceed in the following Letters to examine , in the first place , the faculty of ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract accus accustomed acquired advantage affections appear asso attained beauty benevolence bestowed betwixt called capable ceptions cerning child clear and accurate clear and distinct colours conduct consequences cultivation daugh degree distinct ideas Divine Grace duties early emotions of sublimity emotions of taste endeavour error essen examination exer exercised exertion faculty of attention faculty of conception false associations favourable feelings formed frequently future studies give habits happiness heart human mind imagination improvement indolence infancy instances intel Isaac Watts judgment knowledge languid learning lence LETTER means memory ment moral mother nature necessary neglect ness never notions objects of perception observation operation pains passions perceive perfect period person power of attention prehensible prejudice principles produce propriety pupil racter reason reflection render rienced selfish sense sensible sider sound species sufficiently taught thing tion tivation trains of ideas trains of thought truth vanity vated vigorous vulgar words
Popular passages
Page 254 - So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken ? for ye shall speak into the air.
Page 17 - Yet empty of all good, wherein consists Woman's domestic honour and chief praise; Bred only and completed to the taste Of lustful appetence, to sing, to dance, To dress, and troll the tongue, and roll the eye...
Page 5 - ... curiosity, and to direct it to proper objects ; to exercise their ingenuity and invention ; to cultivate in their minds a turn for speculation, and at the same time preserve their attention alive to the objects around them ; to awaken their sensibilities to the beauties of nature, and to inspire them with a relish "for intellectual enjoyment ; — these form but a part of the business of education...
Page 350 - ... if there were nothing valuable in them for the uses of human life, yet the very speculative parts of this sort of learning are well worth our study ; for by perpetual examples they teach us to conceive with clearness, to connect our ideas...
Page 5 - To instruct youth in the languages and in the sciences, is comparatively of little importance, if we are inattentive to the habits they acquire ; and are not careful in giving, to all their different faculties, and all their different principles of action, a proper degree of employment.
Page 230 - Unargued I obey : so God ordains; God is thy law, thou mine: to know no more Is woman's happiest knowledge and her praise.
Page 141 - So I went to the party suspected, and I found her full of grief; (Now you must know, of all things in the world, I hate a thief). However, I was resolv'd to bring the discourse slily about, Mrs Dukes...
Page 345 - Except some professed scholars, I have often observed that women in general read much more than men; but, for want of a plan, a method, a fixed object, their reading is of little benefit to themselves or others.
Page 5 - Abstracting entirely from the culture of their moral powers, how extensive and difficult is the business of conducting their intellectual improvement! To watch over the associations which they form in their tender years; to give them early habits of mental activity; to rouse their curiosity, and to direct it to proper objects; to exercise their ingenuity and invention; to cultivate in their minds a turn for speculation, and at the same time preserve their attention alive to the objects around them;...
Page 282 - Taste, is, in general, considered as that Faculty of the Human mind, by which we perceive and enjoy whatever is Beautiful or Sublime in the works of Nature or Art.