Latin and Greek in American Education: With Symposia on the Value of Humanistic StudiesFrancis Willey Kelsey Macmillan, 1911 - 396 pages |
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Page 17
... human experience , and culti- vate mental alertness and nimbleness ; which increase the power of concentration , mold the imagination without deadening it , stimulate initiative in thought and action , and develop power of expression ...
... human experience , and culti- vate mental alertness and nimbleness ; which increase the power of concentration , mold the imagination without deadening it , stimulate initiative in thought and action , and develop power of expression ...
Page 30
... human nature and experience in primary forms , as Euclid expresses once for all the elementary propositions of geometry . No second - hand or guidebook knowledge can give the reader of English literature the feeling for reference and ...
... human nature and experience in primary forms , as Euclid expresses once for all the elementary propositions of geometry . No second - hand or guidebook knowledge can give the reader of English literature the feeling for reference and ...
Page 33
... human relations . I have come to have an increasing distrust of the conclusions of men laboring in these fields whose collegiate and uni- versity work consisted largely of lecture courses without a strong admixture of mathematics ...
... human relations . I have come to have an increasing distrust of the conclusions of men laboring in these fields whose collegiate and uni- versity work consisted largely of lecture courses without a strong admixture of mathematics ...
Page 49
... human interest ; but even the Fresh- man is not slow to find the line of least resistance , and not loath to follow it . In these days when the study of history lays a just emphasis upon the knowledge and use of original sources it ...
... human interest ; but even the Fresh- man is not slow to find the line of least resistance , and not loath to follow it . In these days when the study of history lays a just emphasis upon the knowledge and use of original sources it ...
Page 61
... human experience demand ― nay , dictate— widely divergent treatment ; the categories , or funda- mental forms of judgment , applicable in one sphere become merely absurd , sometimes positively erroneous or misleading in another . Men ...
... human experience demand ― nay , dictate— widely divergent treatment ; the categories , or funda- mental forms of judgment , applicable in one sphere become merely absurd , sometimes positively erroneous or misleading in another . Men ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquired Aeschylus American average Bachelor of Arts boys Census cent Christian church Cicero civilization classical studies classical training clergymen college course culture studies demands discipline discussion effect engineer English enrolment experience expression fact faculties forms French German Gildersleeve give graduate Greece Greek and Latin Greek language habit human humanistic ideal important increase influence intellectual interest interpretation judgment knowledge Latin and Greek Latin language Latin literature lawyer learning less literature material mathematics matter meaning medicine memory ment mental method mind ministry modern languages nature Plato practical preparation preparatory present private high schools problem profession professional Professor public high schools question relations requirements Roman Rome scholasticism scientific secondary schools spirit study of Greek study of Latin subjects teachers teaching theology things thought tion translation truth University of Michigan words year-hours
Popular passages
Page 72 - Thou hast left behind Powers that will work for thee; air, earth, and skies; There's not a breathing of the common wind That will forget thee; thou hast great allies; Thy friends are exultations, agonies, And love, and man's unconquerable mind.
Page 124 - Olympian bards who sung Divine ideas below, Which always find us young, And always keep us so.
Page 266 - I call, therefore, a complete and generous education, that which fits a man to perform justly, skilfully, and magnanimously, all the offices, both private and public, of peace and war.
Page 274 - The study of language," he said, "seems to me as if it was given for the very purpose of forming the human mind in youth; and the Greek and Latin languages, in themselves so perfect, and at the same time freed from the insuperable difficulty which must attend any attempt to teach boys philology through the medium of their own spoken language, seem the very instruments by which this is to be effected.
Page 329 - If an Englishman cannot get literary culture out of his Bible, his Shakespeare, his Milton, neither, in my belief, will the profoundest study of Homer and Sophocles, Virgil and Horace, give it to him.
Page 103 - If we inquire what is the real motive for giving boys a classical education, we find it to be simply conformity to public opinion. Men dress their children's minds as they do their bodies, in the prevailing fashion.
Page 392 - VOL. VII. ATHENIAN LEKYTHOI WITH OUTLINE DRAWING IN MATT COLOR ON A WHITE GROUND, AND AN APPENDIX : ADDITIONAL LEKYTHOI WITH OUTLINE DRAWING IN GLAZE VARNISH ON A WHITE GROUND.
Page 207 - ... the circle of their interests. Is it not time we stopped asking indulgence for learning and proclaimed its sovereignty? Is it not time we reminded the college men of this country that they have no right to any distinctive place in any community, unless they can show it by intellectual achievement? That if a university is a place for distinction at all it must be distinguished by the conquests of the mind ? I for my part tell you plainly that that is my motto...
Page 396 - MONUMENTS OF CHRISTIAN ROME By ARTHUR L. FROTHINGHAM, Ph.D., Sometime Associate Director of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome, and formerly Professor of Archaeology and Ancient History in Princeton University. " The learned author reviews the monuments of Rome during the ten centuries from Constantine to the Renaissance." " The plan of the volume is simple and admirable. The first part comprises a historical sketch ; the second, a classification of the monuments.
Page 393 - Parts Sold Separately in Paper Covers: Part I. THE WASHINGTON MANUSCRIPT OF DEUTERONOMY AND JOSHUA. With 3 folding plates. Pp. vi + 104.