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336 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1959
The question is not about kindness, but about instruction: is the school a place of teaching or of psychologizing? Is it to prolong vicariously the parents’ love of innocence and act out their dream of a good society, or is it to impart literacy? And are we to wait till after the PhD to get it? When, finally, is the school to sort out types of mind, and, assuming that all can read, write, and count, enable each kind to acquire the facts and principles relevant to their calling and their tastes? (141).
What critics and specialists do to one another, with all the certitude that a reference library inspires, seems like upholding the standards of accuracy, but in fact accuracy is only tangentially concerned. For accuracy is of the whole as well as of detail, and the fear of error - as against the zeal for truth - yields only a lesser correctness, desirable no doubt, but insufficient and sometimes negligible. (249).