| 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 - 552 sider
...longer need any other guide than himself." He begins the work with a restatement of his basal principle that "everything is good as it comes from the hands...Nature; but everything degenerates in the hands of man." After elaborating this, he shows that we are educated by " three kinds of teachers— nature, man,... | |
| Frank Pierrepont Graves - 1915 - 574 sider
...longer need any other guide than himself." He begins the work with a restatement of his basal principle that "everything is good as it comes from the hands...Nature; but everything degenerates in the hands of man." After elaborating this, he shows that we are educated by " three kinds of teachers — natuTCj man,... | |
| 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... | |
| Frank Pierrepont Graves - 1915 - 550 sider
...begins the work with a restatement of his basal 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 this, he ?hows that we are educated by " three kinds of teachers— nature, man,... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
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