| 1919 - 714 pages
...carrying forward that complex of ideas, acts, and institutions which we call civilization. Those spiritual possessions may be variously classified, but they...institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without them all he cannot become a truly educated or a truly cultivated man. . . . Progress based... | |
| Nicholas Murray Butler - 1898 - 256 pages
...the term mean? I answer, it must mean a gradual adjustment to the spiritual possessions of the race. Those possessions may be variously classified, but...institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without them he cannot become a truly educated or a cultivated man. He is entitled to his scientific... | |
| Nicholas M. Butler - 1898 - 256 pages
...the term mean? I answer, it must mean a gradual adjustment to the spiritual possessions of the race. Those possessions may be variously classified, but...scientific inheritance, to his literary inheritance, to his testhetic inheritance, to his institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without... | |
| Waitman Barbe - 1899 - 120 pages
...inheritance of every young man and young woman? Dr. Butler says that they are five-fold. The youth is entitled to his scientific inheritance, to his literary inheritance, to his esthetic inheritance, to his institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. He has the... | |
| 1898 - 316 pages
...not mere instruction. It is rather a gradual adjustment to the spiritual possessions of the race. " The child is entitled to his scientific inheritance, to his literary inheritance, to his sesthetic inheritance, to his institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance." This doctrine... | |
| Willard Chamberlain Selleck - 1902 - 372 pages
...the term mean t I answer, it must mean a gradual adjustment to the spiritual possessions of the race. Those possessions may be variously classified, but...institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without them he cannot become a truly educated or a cultivated man. . . . That, it seems to me, is... | |
| George William Pease - 1904 - 440 pages
...education ' mean ? " he says : It must mean a gradual adjustment to the spiritual possessions of the race. Those possessions may be variously classified, but they certainly are at least f1vefold. The child is entitled to his scientific inheritance, to his literary inheritance, to his... | |
| James Sheerin - 1906 - 44 pages
...instruction, what is it? I answer, it must mean a gradual adjustment to the spiritual possessions of the race. Those possessions may be variously classified, but...institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without them he cannot become a truly educated or cultivated man The religious element may not be permitted... | |
| Sara Annie Burstall - 1907 - 270 pages
...children ; from it we draw the subjects of our curriculum. Dr. Butler classifies these possessions as five-fold: — The child is entitled to his scientific...institutional inheritance, and to his religious inheritance. Without them he cannot become a truly educated or a cultivated man.1 Science, literature and language,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson McEvoy - 1908 - 472 pages
...answer, it must mean a gradual adjustment of the spiritual possessions of the race. Those possessions are at least five-fold. The child is entitled to his...institutional inheritance and to his religious inheritance." The scientific inheritance is found in geography, nature study, mathematics and physics; the literary... | |
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