Great Pedagogical Essays; Plato to SpencerFranklin Verzelius Newton Painter AMS Press, 1970 - 426 strán (strany) |
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Strana 37
... attain to both or to all , for that is always to every one the most eligible which is the high- est attainable by him . The whole of life is further divided into two parts , business and leisure , war and peace , and all actions into ...
... attain to both or to all , for that is always to every one the most eligible which is the high- est attainable by him . The whole of life is further divided into two parts , business and leisure , war and peace , and all actions into ...
Strana 51
... attain the perfect or end . But perhaps it may be said that boys learn music for the sake of the amusement which they will have when they are grown up . If so , why should they learn them- selves , and not , like the Persian and Median ...
... attain the perfect or end . But perhaps it may be said that boys learn music for the sake of the amusement which they will have when they are grown up . If so , why should they learn them- selves , and not , like the Persian and Median ...
Strana 344
... attain . But it is just as important for the philosopher , as it is sad for the philan- thropist , to see how the great generally care only for their own interests , and take no part in the weighty experiments of education , which might ...
... attain . But it is just as important for the philosopher , as it is sad for the philan- thropist , to see how the great generally care only for their own interests , and take no part in the weighty experiments of education , which might ...
Obsah
ARISTOTLE Biographical Sketch | 33 |
XENOPHON Biographical Sketch | 61 |
CICERO Biographical Sketch | 83 |
Autorské práva | |
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able APOSTOLICAL CONSTITUTIONS Aristippus Aristotle attain become better BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH body Book of Wisdom boys bring brought character child Christian Chrysippus Cleinias Demosthenes discourse divine duties eloquence everything exercise father Fénelon follow give grammar Greek gymnastic habit hand heart Hesiod Holy Scriptures honor human imitate instruction judgment knowledge labor languages Latin learning live manner matter means Menedemus ment mind moral mother nature necessary neglected never observed orator PAINTER PED palæstra parents pedagogues persons philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch poets possible practice praise precepts principles pupil Quintilian Ratio Studiorum reason render RHABANUS MAURUS sake schools slaves Socrates soul speak speech taught teach teachers things thou thought tion tongue treatises true truth tutor understanding virtue whole wisdom wise words writing Xenophon young youth