| Lewis Flint Anderson - 1909 - 370 sider
...entertaining that has ever been written. The keynote of the treatise is given in the opening paragraph. " Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the...; but everything degenerates in the hands of man. He forces one country to nourish the productions of another; one tree to bear the fruits of another.... | |
| Frank Pierrepont Graves - 1912 - 314 sider
...naturalistic principles to the education of an imaginary pupil of that name "from the moment of his birth up to the time when, having become a mature man, he will no Jed longer need any other guide than himself." The work is divided into five parts, four of which deal... | |
| Samuel Chester Parker - 1912 - 540 sider
...the idea of " education according to nature." Ordinarily the first sentence of the first chapter, " Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the author of nature ; everything degenerates in the hands of man," is chosen as the keynote of the book. As a corollary... | |
| Quincy Adams Kuehner - 1913 - 76 sider
...The opening sentence of the Emile contains the keynote to Rousseau's theory of education. He says : "Everything is good as it comes from the hands of...; but everything degenerates in the hands of man." This conception makes childho'od sacred. The child is originally good. It must be protected from the... | |
| Juan Luis Vives - 1913 - 494 sider
...was the last of the encyclopaedists, and even he had had 1 For instance, Rousseau begins his Emile: "Everything is good as it comes from the hands of...; but everything degenerates in the hands of man." It is interesting to note that Vives had said: "All things in this world as they were made by God are... | |
| Mabel Irene Emerson - 1914 - 208 sider
...the use we make of this development and what we learn through our environment. Starting with the idea that "Everything is good as it comes from the hands...Nature; but everything degenerates in the hands of man," he developed by successive stages the education of Emile. In order to make his theory a plausible one,... | |
| Gilbert Burnet, John Clarke - 1914 - 274 sider
...before it, is the parting of the ways. The oft-quoted opening sentence of Rousseau's Emile reads " Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the...Nature ; but everything degenerates in the hands of man ". That points to the other route. Froebel's remarks on the subject are very judicious and correspond... | |
| Frank Pierrepont Graves - 1915 - 550 sider
...his naturalistic principles to an tionai type in imaginary pupil named Emile "from the moment of his birth up to the time when, having become a mature...principle that "everything is good as it comes from thaw hands of the Author of Nature; but everything degenerates in the hands of man." After elaborating... | |
| Patrick Joseph McCormick - 1915 - 448 sider
...nature naturally."1 Rousseau in the beginning states some general principles of his naturalistic theory. "Everything is good as it comes from the hands of...Nature; but everything degenerates in the hands of man. . . . We are born weak; we have need of strength: we are born destitute of everything; we have need... | |
| Stephen Duggan - 1916 - 436 sider
...work, which is an educational treatise in the guise of a romance, is given in the opening sentence. ' ' Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the...nature: but everything degenerates in the hands of man." Human nature, then, is good; there is no original sin; there is no total depravity as taught by the... | |
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