Great Pedogogical Essays: Plato to SpencerAmerican book Company, 1905 - 426 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 38.
Strana 13
... Hear me once more , although you have heard me say the same before — that caution must be always exer- cised , both by the speaker and by the hearer , about any- thing that is singular and unusual . For my tale is one which many a man ...
... Hear me once more , although you have heard me say the same before — that caution must be always exer- cised , both by the speaker and by the hearer , about any- thing that is singular and unusual . For my tale is one which many a man ...
Strana 16
... hears anything strange or unac- customed , does not at once run to embrace the paradox , but he stands considering , like a person who is at a place where three ways meet , and does not very well know his way he may be alone or he may ...
... hears anything strange or unac- customed , does not at once run to embrace the paradox , but he stands considering , like a person who is at a place where three ways meet , and does not very well know his way he may be alone or he may ...
Strana 17
... hear ; and he who can at the instant the city is sacrificing make the citizens weep most carries away the palm of victory . Now , ought we not to forbid such strains as these ? And if PAINTER PED . Ess.- 2 ever our citizens must hear ...
... hear ; and he who can at the instant the city is sacrificing make the citizens weep most carries away the palm of victory . Now , ought we not to forbid such strains as these ? And if PAINTER PED . Ess.- 2 ever our citizens must hear ...
Strana 18
Plato to Spencer Franklin Verzelius Newton Painter. ever our citizens must hear such lamentations , then on some unblest and inauspicious day let there be choruses of foreign and hired minstrels , like those who accompany the departed at ...
Plato to Spencer Franklin Verzelius Newton Painter. ever our citizens must hear such lamentations , then on some unblest and inauspicious day let there be choruses of foreign and hired minstrels , like those who accompany the departed at ...
Strana 20
... hears the opposite he detests it , and calls it illiberal ; but if trained in the sweet and vulgar music , he deems the opposite cold and displeasing . So that , as I was saying before , while he who hears them gains no more pleasure ...
... hears the opposite he detests it , and calls it illiberal ; but if trained in the sweet and vulgar music , he deems the opposite cold and displeasing . So that , as I was saying before , while he who hears them gains no more pleasure ...
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able APOSTOLICAL CONSTITUTIONS Aristippus Aristotle attain become better BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH body Book of Wisdom boys bring brought child Christian Chrysippus Cleinias Demosthenes discourse divine duties eloquence everything exercise father Fénelon follow give grammar greatest Greek gymnastic habit hand heart Hesiod Holy Scriptures honor human imitate instruction Ischomachus judgment knowledge labor languages Latin live manner matter means Menedemus ment mind moral mother nature necessary neglected never observed orator PAINTER PED palæstra parents pedagogy persons philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch poets possible practice praise precepts principles punishment 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 wisdom wise words writing Xenophon young youth