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<head>Ir. Educ.</head> | |||
<head>Latin & Greek</head> | <head>Latin & Greek</head> | ||
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<hi rend="underline">Selection</hi>.</p><pb/> | <hi rend="underline">Selection</hi>.</p><pb/> | ||
FAshion only is what makes LAtin and Greek be regarded as necessary. Men learn them, only because it is a disgrace to be ignorant of them. The gravest aaand most orthodox among us are afraid of making the lower classes of the people toom much in earnest about Religion where they are are stated fanatics: witness the Methodists. Zeal alone without any peculiar tenets is enough to make what is called a Methodist. Learning Latin & Greek morality &c we learn a great deal which puzzles & confines us - which we cannot apply but to in the state in which we receive it, and which we are obliged to unlearn more or less.. Latin & Greek have the preminence in the old establishments. If the new <gap/> is inferior the old have nothing to apprehend from it: if superior they may copy it. | |||
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Click Here To Edit Ir. Educ. Latin & Greek
As we do without
the knowledge of
the German, so might
we without that of
the Latin & Greek
More words in our
language are not
derived from the
latter than from
the former
Disadvantages
12 Bad Morality
1. Love of war
2. Veneration of
bad political
institutions
3. Teach vices which
we punish with
the gallows.
4. Are full of obsenity.
5. Teach inferior eloquence.
6. Teach irrelevant
eloquence
7. Teach false
natural philosophy
and natural
history
The use of languages
other than our own are
1. To converse with
men with whom we
would not converse
otherwise
2. To learn things
which we could not
so well learn otherwise.
While men are
acquiring false
words, they are acquiring
false ideas
of things.
—
may advise a excellences
---page break---
Sciences
Advantages
1. They present
always something new to
be discovered-
Dead languages
possess such no such
advantage.
2. What is discovered
in them, many of
them, others besides
discover reader
At the publick
expense men ought
to be taught nothing
but what is really
useful - what is
agreeable, they will
in proportion as it
is agreeable teach
themselves.
Nothing is worth
reading in Greek
or Latin that would
not be worth reading
had it been
written in English.
But you actually
have in English
whatever is worth
reading in Greek
or Latin.
Poetry- no more
reason for teaching
it than Chess or
Cards.
As to the metre
it is upon a level
with punning
As to the imagery
its characteristic
is to give false
views of things-
either obscure or
exaggerated -
Exactness, viz: truths
is acknowledged to be
the bane of poetry.
---page break---
Poetry when printing
was unknown
and even writing
uncommon had
one use which it
has not now. It
served as a vehicle
for history and
for laws. But
in this point of
view Grays's
is a great
improvement on it.
No Latin or Greek
poetry is either
so agreeable or so
useful as what may
be met with in English
poetry.
No other English
Poetry is more
agreeable than dramatic
poetry and
novels: none so
useful as good
dramatic poetry
and good novels.
But neither dramatic
poetry nor
novels have any
occasion to be taught.
If Latin and
Greek are taught
they ought to be
taught only in a
Selection.
---page break---
FAshion only is what makes LAtin and Greek be regarded as necessary. Men learn them, only because it is a disgrace to be ignorant of them. The gravest aaand most orthodox among us are afraid of making the lower classes of the people toom much in earnest about Religion where they are are stated fanatics: witness the Methodists. Zeal alone without any peculiar tenets is enough to make what is called a Methodist. Learning Latin & Greek morality &c we learn a great deal which puzzles & confines us - which we cannot apply but to in the state in which we receive it, and which we are obliged to unlearn more or less.. Latin & Greek have the preminence in the old establishments. If the new is inferior the old have nothing to apprehend from it: if superior they may copy it.
Identifier: | JB/106/076/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 106. |
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106 |
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076 |
ir. educ. |
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003 |
final objects / legenda / catholicism establishment of questions / latin & greek / sciences |
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plan |
2 |
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recto |
fi |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l munn [britannia emblem]]] |
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benjamin constant |
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34664 |
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