Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from The Three Kingdoms of Nature: Briefly Described
The faculties of our minds are de'veloped in succession, as we advance in age, each of them reaching its maximum, and then gradually diminishing. In childhood, the senses acquire their greatest developement in boyhood and youth, the memory and imagination; in early manhood the purely reasoning faculties; and in adult life, the judge ment.
A rational system of education should be guided by the physiological law here laid down. The child should be instructed mainly through his sensations; the boy should learn Languages, ancient and modern, and Natural History, so far as it depends on observation; the youth should cultivate Mathematics and Logics; While studies, such as Ethics, Physiology, and Politics, should be re served for the more mature period of life, in which the judgement corrects the rash conclusions founded on mere memory and reason.
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