登陆注册
20031800000003

第3章 INTRODUCTORY NOTE(3)

Relatively most excellent was the old education which consisted solely in keeping oneself whole, pure, and honourable. For it did not at least depreciate personality, although it did not form it. It would be well if but a hundredth part of the pains now taken by parents were given to interference with the life of the child and the rest of the ninety and nine employed in leading, without interference, in acting as an unforeseen, an invisible providence through which the child obtains experience, from which he may draw his own conclusions. The present practice is to impress one's own discoveries, opinions, and principles on the child by constantly directing his actions. The last thing to be realised by the educator is that he really has before him an entirely new soul, a real self whose first and chief right is to think over the things with which he comes in contact. By a new soul he understands only a new generation of an old humanity to be treated with a fresh dose of the old remedy. We teach the new souls not to steal, not to lie, to save their clothes, to learn their lessons, to economise their money, to obey commands, not to contradict older people, say their prayers, to fight occasionally in order to be strong. But who teaches the new souls to choose for themselves the path they must tread? Who thinks that the desire for this path of their own can be so profound that a hard or even mild pressure towards uniformity can make the whole of childhood a torment.

The child comes into life with the inheritance of the preceding members of the race; and this inheritance is modified by adaptation to the environment. But the child shows also individual variations from the type of the species, and if his own character is not to disappear during the process of adaptation, all self-determined development of energy must be aided in every way and only indirectly influenced by the teacher, who should understand how to combine and emphasise the results of this development.

Interference on the part of the educator, whether by force or persuasion, weakens this development if it does not destroy it altogether.

The habits of the household, and the child's habits in it must be absolutely fixed if they are to be of any value. Amiel truly says that habits are principles which have become instincts, and have passed over into flesh and blood. To change habits, he continues, means to attack life in its very essence, for life is only a web of habits.

Why does everything remain essentially the same from generation to generation? Why do highly civilised Christian people continue to plunder one another and call it exchange, to murder one another en masse, and call it nationalism, to oppress one another and call it statesmanship?

Because in every new generation the impulses supposed to have been rooted out by discipline in the child, break forth again, when the struggle for existence--of the individual in society, of the society in the life of the state--begins. These passions are not transformed by the prevalent education of the day, but only repressed. Practically this is the reason why not a single savage passion has been overcome in humanity. Perhaps man-eating may be mentioned as an exception. But what is told of European ship companies or Siberian prisoners shows that even this impulse, under conditions favourable to it, may be revived, although in the majority of people a deep physical antipathy to man-eating is innate. Conscious incest, despite similar deviations, must also be physically contrary to the majority, and in a number of women, modesty--the unity between body and soul in relation to love--is an incontestable provision of nature. So too a minority would find it physically impossible to murder or steal. With this list I have exhausted everything which mankind, since its conscious history began, has really so intimately acquired that the achievement is passed on in its flesh and blood. Only this kind of conquest can really stand up against temptation in every form.

A deep physiological truth is hidden in the use of language when one speaks of unchained passions; the passions, under the prevailing system of education, are really only beasts of prey imprisoned in cages.

While fine words are spoken about individual development, children are treated as if their personality had no purpose of its own, as if they were made only for the pleasure, pride, and comfort of their parents; and as these aims are best advanced when children become like every one else, people usually begin by attempting to make them respectable and useful members of society.

But the only correct starting point, so far as a child's education in becoming a social human being is concerned, is to treat him as such, while strengthening his natural disposition to become an individual human being.

The new educator will, by regularly ordered experience, teach the child by degrees his place in the great orderly system of existence; teach him his responsibility towards his environment. But in other respects, none of the individual characteristics of the child expressive of his life will be suppressed, so long as they do not injure the child himself, or others. The right balance must be kept between Spencer's definition of life as an adaptation to surrounding conditions, and Nietzsche's definition of it as the will to secure power.

In adaptation, imitation certainly plays a great role, but individual exercise of power is just as important. Through adaptation life attains a fixed form; through exercise of power, new factors.

同类推荐
  • 五郎八卦棍口诀

    五郎八卦棍口诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 扁鹊心书

    扁鹊心书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE YELLOW FAIRY BOOK

    THE YELLOW FAIRY BOOK

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 贝多树下思惟十二因缘经

    贝多树下思惟十二因缘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 幼科证治准绳

    幼科证治准绳

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 胭脂错:嚣张妖后很倾国

    胭脂错:嚣张妖后很倾国

    她是冷酷无情的庄主,从小过着颠龙倒凤的生活。一直以来只想本分地做她的庄主,可残酷的命运却告知她,你将是天龙的皇后。这对她来说简直是天大的讽刺,而那坊间流传的凤女传说,更将她逼上妖后之路。“黎诺,你不仁,就休怪我不义,我就毁了这江山,让你后悔终生!”
  • 娘子,此地无银

    娘子,此地无银

    她容易吗?贪财嫁了个傻王也就罢了,偏这傻王装傻,引她入瓮不说,还骗着她闯江湖,闹朝堂,直搅得她忘记嫁人偷财的初衷!看到他为救她受伤,她居然眼都不眨就拿钱去请大夫,完了完了,她是不是喜欢上他了!情节虚构,切勿模仿。
  • 天后重生:一生一世一双人

    天后重生:一生一世一双人

    〔文章内容正在全面修改中,谢谢大家的支持〕第一影后顾未央,重生于顾家大小姐顾伊人。他,是A国风云人物,几乎人人皆知,有人说他温柔,也有人说他嗜血狂暴,拥有双重人格的他,碰到女主后,会不会有所改变。顾伊人“其实,我想要的幸福很简单,一生一世一双人就好。”帝少泽“其实,我能给你的幸福很简单,一生一世不相弃”(第一次写文章,谢谢大家支持)
  • 女人离婚后

    女人离婚后

    《女人离婚后》是慧想了好久才下决心要写的故事,主题主要围绕一个叫蒋雯的女人婚变后开始,如何面对流言,面对情感,面对工作,如何重新幸福。小说源于生活,如果哪个情节触动了你的心弦,还望见谅,慧爱想,爱看,爱听。慧将以第一人称来给大家展示一个女人离婚后是如何重生的。
  • 灵魂破

    灵魂破

    截拳道PK异世大陆的强者女人梦中的情人魔法师的恶梦战士的杀手神的希望孟辉:“如果可以选择,我可以什么都不要,只要你们!”
  • 爆宠十世:废柴要成仙

    爆宠十世:废柴要成仙

    有萌宠、有空间、有帅哥……打打怪、降降妖、升升级……种田穿越好危险,遍地开满金手指,爆宠九世嫌不够,废柴咬定神仙师。一直在神界任司命的小仙,因助东华圣君历劫完满,偷改命格,被情敌花蕊上仙告密,触怒锦宸天妃,剥去仙籍,打下凡界。锦宸天妃却未料自己与帝君的玩劣之子北辰上神得知后,一向玩司命小仙上瘾的儿子竟然舍身相救,被诛仙台下的戾气伤得魂飞魄散。锦宸天妃又怒又恨,誓要将司命小仙打入牲畜轮回之道,却是阴错阳差。今次,司命小仙与北辰上神两两转世,孟婆如是说,纵喝孟婆汤,亦可两不忘,单看,那情深几许?
  • 修罗之火:小样你过来

    修罗之火:小样你过来

    曼珠沙华盛开在彼岸,命运的罗盘在呼唤,人鱼公主将生命祭献,冰之子在绝望中凄凉的告白,伟大的神向您祈祷,带给这乱世一点点光明也好。火红的嫁衣坠落在悬崖,回眸一眼那耀眼的红,凤凰涅槃,只记得那一年的桃花未央鲜血漫天,泪水肆意在绝美的脸庞,敌不过的终究是岁月流年。一把精美的匕首把心挖掉,流泪也不会悲伤,凄美的面孔净是绝望的笑,今生输了潇洒的诺言,忘川河边的曼珠沙华开得格外妖艳。
  • 终是夫妻,顾少的粘人小妖精

    终是夫妻,顾少的粘人小妖精

    顾致琛为情所伤,渐渐地不敢对女人动真情。在玩世不恭了四年多后,他也开始想她了。在顾致琛找了萧祉娇半年后,他终于找到了她,她含着泪对他说,当初是她的妹妹萧悠僮拆散了他们。顾致琛步步为营,娶了萧悠僮,决定把她圈起来,狠狠地折磨她,因为是她当初让他痛不欲生。顾致琛把萧悠僮地上的心捧到天上,然后再把她的心从天上狠狠地摔到地下,终于让她明白了一个人原来可以痛到,没有表情,没有语言,没有情绪……顾致琛:真搞不懂你在想什么!萧悠僮:呵呵,你并不爱我,怎么会懂我?
  • 90后全职妈妈

    90后全职妈妈

    一个孩子的诞生绝不是偶然,而是上天给你的礼物,作为一名母亲,我必须和他一起成长,陪伴着他,或许会有很多心酸,但是我期待着全职妈妈的生活!
  • 人俗世间

    人俗世间

    人的社会是由人构成的,所有人都生活在俗世。世界上最强大的不是武力统治而是人情世故和物质枷锁,而人唯有一物能与之抗衡便是心,心由人而生由人而灭由人而变。无论哪个社会,唯有其中坚强者才能在世间有一席之地,剩下的都是草芥。