| Benjamin Severance Winchester - 1917 - 306 sider
...common people, but also to his ability to clothe his ideas in forceful and popular language. Assuming that "everything is good as it comes from the hands...nature, but everything degenerates in the hands of man," Rousseau elaborated his doctrine that nature is to be studied and followed. He would have society get... | |
| Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, Charles Stedman Macfarland - 1917 - 208 sider
...common people, but also to his ability to clothe his ideas in forceful and popular language. Assuming that "everything is good as it comes from the hands...nature, but everything degenerates in the hands of man," Rousseau elaborated his doctrine that nature is to be studied and followed. He would have society get... | |
| Marie Tudor Garland - 1917 - 568 sider
...great apostle of the return to nature, and the revolutionist against traditional Western education. " Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the...; but everything degenerates in the hands of man," is the opening sentence of " Emile." " We are born weak," continues Rousseau, " we have need of strength... | |
| Joseph Kinmont Hart - 1918 - 440 sider
...set forth in his "Emile." There are four stages in the education of the boy "from the moment of his birth up to the time when, having become a mature...will no longer need any other guide than himself. " These four stages are : (1) Infancy, during which the child is to be taken away from society and... | |
| Joseph Kinmont Hart - 1918 - 440 sider
...set forth in his "Emile." There are four stages in the education of the boy "from the moment of his birth up to the time when, having become a mature...will no longer need any other guide than himself." These four stages are: (1) Infancy, during which the child is to be taken away from society and given... | |
| Gabriel Compayré - 1918 - 696 sider
...of the perfect goodness of the child. The Emile opens with this solemn declaration: — "Everj'thing is good as it comes from the hands of the Author of nature; everything degenerates in the hands of man." And in another place, " Let us assume as an incontestable... | |
| Ping Ling - 1919 - 168 sider
...not a matter of the spontaneous outflow of the unlearned powers." Nor was Rousseau right in saying that " everything is good as it comes from the hands...Nature, but everything degenerates in the hands of man." He thinks that the natural man is complete in himself and he is always good if he is uncontaminated... | |
| Charles Clinton Boyer - 1919 - 480 sider
...wonderful book is education "according to nature." Rousseau makes the announcement in the opening sentence: "Everything is good as it comes from the hands of...nature; but everything degenerates in the hands of man." Assuming the truth of this statement, Rousseau contends that the child develops by stages; that we... | |
| Philip Raphael V. Curoe - 1921 - 326 sider
...These, with the outstanding educational recommendations in each, are 1 . From Birth to 5 — Since "everything is good as it comes from the hands of the Author of Nature," the underlying principle is Negative Education (laissez-faire, "hands off"). Physically, this meant... | |
| Philip Raphael V. Curoe - 1921 - 208 sider
...— These, with the outstanding educational recommendations in each, are 1. From Birth to 5 — Since "everything is good as it comes from the hands of the Author of Nature," the underlying principle is Negative Education (laissez-faire, ''hands off"). Physically, this meant... | |
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