|
taken at my former school while my eldest daughter was attending it |
"I mean that to train a citizen is to train a critic. The whole point of education is that it should give a man abstract and eternal standards, by which he can judge material and fugitive conditions. If a citizen is to be a reformer, he must start with some ideal which he does not merely obtain by gazing reverently at the unreformed institutions. And if any one aks, as so many are asking:'What is the use of my son learning about ancient Athens and remote China and medieval guilds and monasteries, and all sorts of dead and distant things, when he is going to be a superior scientific plumber in Pimlico?', the answer is obvious enough. 'The use of it is that he may have some power of comparison, which will not only prevent him from supposing that Pimlico covers the whole planet, but also enable him, while doing full credit to the beauties and virtues of Pimlico, to point out that, here and there, as revealed by alternative experiments, even Pimlico may conceal somewhere a defect.'" G. K. Chesterton, On Business Education
|
and I do not remember it having been there while I was a pupil |
No comments:
Post a Comment