新编英语教程7下课文(ANEWENGLISHCOURSELEVEL7Unit714TextI).doc
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1、Unit Seven The Aims of Education Alfred North Whitehead1 Culture is activity of thought,and receptiveness to beauty and humane feeling.Scraps of information have nothing to do with it.A merely well-informed man is the most useless bore on Gods earth.What we should aim at producing is men who possess
2、 both culture and expert knowledge in some special direction.Their expert knowledge will give them the ground to start from,and their culture will lead them as deep as philosophy and as high as art.We have to remember that the valuable intellectual development is self-development,and that it mostly
3、takes place between the ages of sixteen and thirty.As to training,the most important part is given by mothers before the age of twelve.A saying due to Archbishop Temple illustrates my meaning .Surprise was expressed at the success in after-life of a man,who as a boy at Rugby had been somewhat undist
4、inguished. He answered,It is not what they are at eighteen,it is what they become afterwards that matters. 2 In training a child to activity of thought,above all things we must beware of what I will call inert ideas-that is to say,ideas that are merely received into the mind without being utilised,o
5、r tested,or thrown into fresh combination. 3 In the history of education,the most striking phenomenon is that schools of learning,which,at one epoch are alive with a ferment of genius,in a succeeding generation exhibit merely pedantry and routine.The reason is,that they are overladden with inert ide
6、as.Education with inert ideas is not only useless.It is,above all things,harmful-Corruptio Optimi ,Pessima. Except at rare intervals of intellectual ferment,education in the past has been radically infected with inert ideas. That is the reason why uneducated clever women,who have seen much of the wo
7、rld,are in middle life so much the most cultured part of the community. They have been saved from this horrible burden of inert ideas. Every intellectual revolution which has ever stirred humanity into greatness has been a passionate protest against the inert ideas. Then,alas,with pathetic ignorance
8、 of human psychology,it has proceeded by some educational scheme to bind humanity afresh with inert ideas of its own fashioning. 4 Let us now ask how in our system of education we are to guard against this mental dryrot. We enunciate two educational commandments,Do not teach too many subjects,and ag
9、ain, What you teach,teach thoroughly. 5 The result of teaching small parts of a large number of subjects is the passive reception of disconnected ideas,not illumined with any spark of vitality. Let the main ideas which are introduced into a childs education be few and important,and let them be throw
10、n into every combination possible.The child should make them his own,and should understand their application here and now in the circumstances of his actual life. From the very beginning of his education,the child should experience the joy of discovery. The discovery which he has to make,is that gen
11、eral ideas give an understanding of that stream of events which pours through his life,which is his life.By understanding I mean more than a mere logical analysis,though that is included.I mean understandingin the sense in which it is used in the French proverb,To understand all,is to forgive all.Pe
12、dants sneer at an education which is useful. But if education is not useful,what is it?Is it a talent,to be hidden away in a napkin? Of course,education should be useful,whatever your aim in life.It was useful to Saint Augustine and it was useful to Napoleon. It is useful,because understanding is us
13、eful. 6 I pass lightly over that understanding which should be given by the literary side of education.Nor do I wish to be supposed to pronounce on the relative merits of a classical or a modern curriculum.I would only remark that the understanding which we want is an understanding of an insistent p
14、resent.The only use of knowledge of the past is to equip us for the present.No more deadly harm can be done to young minds than by depreciation of the present.The present contains all that there is.It is holy ground;for it is the past,and it is the future.At the same time it must be observed that an
15、 age is no less past if it existed two hundred years ago than if it existed two thousand years ago.Do not be deceived by the pendantry of dates.The ages of Shakespeare and of Moliere are no less past than are the ages of Sophocles and of Virgil. The communion of saints is a great and inspiring assem
16、blage,but it has only one possible hall of meeting,and that is,the present;and the mere lapse of time through which any particular group of saints must travel to reach that meeting-place,makes very little difference. 7 Passing now to the scientific and logical side of education,we remember that here
17、 also ideas which are not utilised are positively harmful.By utilising an idea,I mean relating it to that stream,compounded of sense perceptions,feelings,hopes,desires,and of mental activities adjusting thought to thought,which forms our life.I can imagine a set of beings which might fortify their s
18、ouls by passively reviewing disconnected ideas. Humanity is not built that way-except perhaps some editors of newwspapers. 8 In scientific training,the first thing to do with an idea is to prove it.But allow me for one moment to extend the meaning of prove,I mean-to prove its worth.Now an idea is no
19、t worth much unless the propositions in which it is embodied are true.Accordingly an essential part of the proof of an idea is the proof,either by experiment or by logic,of the truth of the propositions. But it is not essential that this proof of the truth should constitute the first introduction to
20、 the idea. After all, its assertion by the authority of respectable teachers is sufficient evidence to begin with.In our first contact with a set of propositions,we commence by appreciating their importance.That is what we all do in after-life. We do not attempt,in the strict sense,to prove or to di
21、sprove anything,unless its importance makes it worthy of that honour. These two processes of proof,in the narrow sense,and of appreciation,do not require a rigid separation in time. Both can be proceeded with nearly concurrently. But in so far as either process must have the priority,it should be th
22、at of appreciation by use. 9 Furthermore,we should not endeavour to use propositions in isolation.Emphatically I do not mean, a neat little set of experiments to illustrate Proposition 1 and then the proof of Proposition 1,a neat little set of experiments to illustrate Proposition 11 and then the pr
23、oof of Proposition 11,and so on to the end of the book.Nothing could be more boring. Interrelated truths are utilised en bloc,and the various propositions are employed in any order,and with any reiteration. Choose some important applications of your theoretical subject;and study them concurrently wi
24、th the systematic theoretical exposition. Keep the theoretical exposition short and simple,but let it be strict and rigid so far as it goes. It should not be too long for it to be easily known with thoroughness and accuracy. The consequences of a plethora of half-digested theoretical knowledge are d
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