登陆注册
37741800000003

第3章 Chapter I(3)

The experiment proves,he says,the possibility of instilling into a child an amount of knowledge such as is rarely acquired before manhood.He was,he considers,rather below than above par in quickness of apprehension,retentiveness of memory,and energy of character.What he did,therefore,could be done by any child of average health and capacity.His later achievements,he thinks,were due to the fact that,among other favourable circumstances,his father's training had given him the start of his contemporaries by 'a quarter of a century.'(6)His opinion is probably coloured by his tendency to set down all differences between men as due to external circumstances.He and his father,as Professor Bain notes,inclined to the doctrine of Helvius that children all start alike.(7)Mill,by those who dissent from this view,will probably be held to have been endowed by nature with an extraordinary power of acquiring and assimilating knowledge,and presumably had from infancy whatever intellectual qualities are implied in that gift.His experience in teaching his own family might have taught him that the gift is not shared by the average child.So far,however,as Mill's judgment refers to his own case,it asserts what I take to be a truth not always admitted.He is sometimes noticed as an example of the evils done by excessive instruction.Yet,after all,he certainly became one of the leading men of his generation,and,if this strenuous education was not the sole cause,it must be reckoned as having been one main condition of his success.His father's teaching had clearly one,and that the highest,merit.The son had been taught really to use his mind;he had been trained to argue closely;to test conclusions instead of receiving them passively,and to systematise his knowledge as he acquired it.The course of strenuous mental gymnastics qualified him to appear in early youth as a vigorous controversialist,and to achieve an immense quantity of valuable work before he passed middle age.It seems improbable that more could have been made of his faculties by any other system;and he gave a rarely approached instance of a life in which the waste of energy is reduced to a minimum.

Mill's verdict must,however,be qualified upon another ground,which he might have been expected to recognise.No one was more anxious to assert in general that an education is good in proportion as it stimulates the faculties instead of simply storing the mind with facts.Undoubtedly Mill's knowledge was of use to him.He became widely read and interested in a large circle of subjects.But we cannot hold that the mere knowledge gave him a 'quarter of a century'start.The,knowledge,which can be acquired by a child of fourteen is necessarily crude;the Theaetetus or the history of Thucydides could not represent real thought for him;and one would rather say that a year's activity at twenty would have enabled him,if he had read only a quarter as much by fourteen,to make up the deficiency.The knowledge was no doubt a useful foundation;but,so far as it was acquired at the cost of excessive strain,the loss would greatly overbalance the gain.It seems clear that Mill's health did in fact suffer;and a loss of energy was far more serious than any childish knowledge could compensate.I cannot help thinking,with the stalled 'Philistine,'that a little cricket would have been an excellent substitute for half the ancient literature instilled into a lad who was not prepared really to appreciate either the thought or the literary charm.

The system had further and permanent results.Mill saw little of other boys.His father was afraid of his being corrupted or at least vulgarised by association with the average schoolboy.He had leisure enough,he declares,though he was never allowed a holiday;but his leisure was dedicated to quiet and 'even bookish'amusements.He was unready and awkward;untrained in the ordinary accomplishments which come from the society of contemporaries.The result was --besides the trifling loss of mere physical accomplishments --that Mill was a recluse even in childhood.There was another special reason for this isolation.

Mill himself says that he was brought up without any religious instruction;and though Professor Bain tells us that the boy went to church in his infancy,it must have been at so early a period as to leave no mark upon his memory.(8)Up to the age of fourteen,therefore,Mill,while kept apart from the ordinary influences,was imbibing with astonishing rapidity a vast amount of knowledge,and inevitably taking for granted the general opinions of his father's party.

同类推荐
  • 杂纂之纂得确

    杂纂之纂得确

    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。
  • Medical Essays

    Medical Essays

    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。
  • 释肇序

    释肇序

    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。
  • 元始天尊说得道了身经

    元始天尊说得道了身经

    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。
  • 太极通书

    太极通书

    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。
热门推荐
  • 腹黑弟弟:呆萌姐姐请接招

    腹黑弟弟:呆萌姐姐请接招

    那年,他15岁、她16岁,他来到她家,她的哥哥,让她照顾他;他来到她的学校,他被誉为校草;他和她的故事从那里开始。
  • 向温商学习

    向温商学习

    有着“东方犹太人”之称的温州人虽然没有数千年的经商史,但他们的智慧却促使他们在短短的二十几年创造了世界商界的奇迹。
  • 魂殇之灵碎随风

    魂殇之灵碎随风

    魂谷,魂莺花。情缘梦随,碎情未果。......天坠星雨,阴月城落。月羽已逝,清风重生。星灵师封,重启星魂。你若清风,我自盛开。天定星灵,命定重生。逆天而行,我便是天。片段一:她淡淡一笑:我要去找你,你在哪里等我?他温润一笑:黄泉。片段二:“收起你鄙视的眼神,不是偷听!”片段三:“喂,我可是星星的后裔,你别惹我,小心我把你设为星星的黑名单!”简介无能,开头小虐,内容大宠,欢迎跳坑,绝不弃坑!更新稳定,如若未更,必会加更,敬请期待,废话完毕!......魂莺花,双生花。缘到离,天之翼。
  • 谁的花为谁开

    谁的花为谁开

    一个清苦而又清高的男生与一个性感而又性情的女人,将发生怎样的搞笑却伤感的故事呢,他们中谁是武林高手,谁又是纯情的世外人,到底现实是一个悲剧,还是理想是一个悲剧,或者红尘人是一个悲剧,抑或?告诉我。
  • 首席大人,宝贝不认你

    首席大人,宝贝不认你

    一场车祸、一个谎言、两个破碎的家庭……他,带着如海深的仇恨,建造了属于自己的金融帝国。她,怀着登上林肯中心的巨大梦想在温室中幸福成长。一次偶然的相遇,命运的齿轮开始转动……血海深仇、挚爱迷情到底该如何选择。与此同时,一个巨大的阴谋开始酝酿,慢慢笼罩两人,经历生死的两人是否能战胜心中阴霾?
  • 总裁追妻:姐妹偷种生子

    总裁追妻:姐妹偷种生子

    总裁兄弟两被强了!!!两个没谈过恋爱,却对男人失望透顶的女人,她们不想结婚,却想生儿子,怎么办???——偷种生子。于是,颜洛、颜御两兄弟,因为优秀的基因,华丽丽中标了……夏小满,六年前,你把我睡了,六年后你还要设计让别的女人来睡我,偷走我的心,现在又毫不犹豫地丢掉,很好,看来我不必对你仁慈了……
  • 世界第一的伯爵殿下

    世界第一的伯爵殿下

    苏沫妖,五年之约,已经到了回来吧,我们都在等着你等待着五年之后的你……五年之后的你是否还是像以前一样任性不懂事?独自摔倒却又独自舔着伤口?明明无法做到却还是在背后默默努力?是否还是像以前一样,信命却又不认命?五年过去了,当年穿着粉色蓬蓬裙的任性少女已经离去,留下的,是世界第一的伯爵殿下且看多面魔女争夺王位之战……
  • 神眸天师

    神眸天师

    命里缺水,取名三水,没想到一次探险,居然深陷地底深坑,为土石所困,更遭遇似魔似仙的神秘人,令他生死一线间......“你是人是鬼?不要吃我……我,我追了女朋友三年,好不容易成了,暑假陪她回家见父母,不久就要结婚,我不想死啊……”“撒谎!你满身男性污秽之气,里外无一丝胭粉味道,至少已经有月余未曾接近过妙龄女子,要与谁相伴成婚?”……浪你个浪的,人若卑微,神鬼皆嫌。一名自诩“轻度”猥琐的凡夫俗子,穿梭至异界,会有怎样惊险而离奇的遭遇?浩瀚星空,神眸再现。众域纷争的背后,修行之路的尽头,隐藏着怎样的亘古之秘?欢迎点击《神眸天师》。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 绛珠的泪

    绛珠的泪

    一段情债,因果缘由,但,若是一开始便是错了呢?