| John Locke - 1922 - 294 pages
...what I have said in the beginning of this discourse be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities...is owing more to their education than to any thing. else; we have reason to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds, and... | |
| John Locke - 1928 - 436 pages
...very remote and distant places. If what I have said be true, as I do not doubt but 3 it is, viz. that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men is owing more to their education than to anything else, we have reason to conclude that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds,... | |
| Andreas Selmeci - 1994 - 384 pages
...Übersetzung hrsg. v. Andreas Flitner, Düsseldorf/ München 1954, 6. Kap., § l (S. 45)). 3 Dazu Locke: «The difference to be found in the Manners and Abilities...is owing more to their 'Education than to any thing eise» (Some Thoughts concerning Education aaO: § 32), und Helvetius: «edes Menschen Original-Charakter... | |
| Kate Rousmaniere, Kari Dehli, Ning De Coninck-Smith - 1997 - 310 pages
...Here the (male) individual stands forth in his entitety as a product of education — as Locke pur it, "The difference to be found in the Manners and Abilities of Men, is owing more to theit Education than to any thing else."32 Education begins by forming the body and shaping its manner... | |
| Christopher Flint - 2002 - 416 pages
...that constitutional differences are insignificant in comparison with the effect of education. "That the Difference to be found in the Manners and Abilities...is owing more to their Education than to any thing else; we have reason to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming Children's Minds, and... | |
| Antonio T. De Nicolás - 2000 - 582 pages
...what I have said in the beginning of this discourse be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. That the difference to be found in the manners and abilities...is owing more to their education than to any thing else, we have reason to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds, and... | |
| Richard C. Smith - 2004 - 616 pages
...change, that the work of the educator is conditioned only by his own skill and opportunities, that " the difference to be found in the Manners and Abilities of Men is owing more to their Education than to anything else."3 McDougall4 has stated that English administration in India has been based on Locke's... | |
| Terttu Nevalainen - 2006 - 188 pages
...what I have said in the beginning of this Discourse, be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. That the difference to be found in the Manners and Abilities...is owing more to their Education, than to any thing else, we have reason to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming Children's Minds, and... | |
| Frank M. Flanagan - 2005 - 242 pages
...ambivalent regarding the power of education to shape the individual. On the one hand he declares that, 'the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men is owing more to their education than to anything else'. Yet elsewhere he appears to qualify this view substantially. He acknowledges that it... | |
| John Farrell - 2006 - 372 pages
...submission."33 This is a key lesson for education, in many ways the central Lockean concern. Since "the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men is owing more to their education than to anything else, we have reason to conclude that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds... | |
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