An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith (ebooks children's books free .TXT) 📗
- Author: Adam Smith
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among different colleges. A regulation, on the contrary, which
prohibited even the independent members of every particular
college from leaving it, and going to any other, without leave
first asked and obtained of that which they meant to abandon,
would tend very much to extinguish that emulation.
If in each college, the tutor or teacher, who was to instruct
each student in all arts and sciences, should not be voluntarily
chosen by the student, but appointed by the head of the college ;
and if, in case of neglect, inability, or bad usage, the student
should not be allowed to change him for another, without leave
first asked and obtained ; such a regulation would not only tend
very much to extinguish all emulation among the different tutors
of the same college, but to diminish very much, in all of them,
the necessity of diligence and of attention to their respective
pupils. Such teachers, though very well paid by their
students, might be as much disposed to neglect them, as those who
are not paid by them at all or who have no other recompense but
their salary.
If the teacher happens to be a man of sense, it must be an
unpleasant thing to him to be conscious, while he is lecturing to
his students, that he is either speaking or reading nonsense, or
what is very little better than nonsense. It must, too, be
unpleasant to him to observe, that the greater part of his
students desert his lectures ; or perhaps, attend upon them with
plain enough marks of neglect, contempt, and derision. If he is
obliged, therefore, to give a certain number of lectures, these
motives alone, without any other interest, might dispose him to
take some pains to give tolerably good ones. Several different
expedients, however, may be fallen upon, which will effectually
blunt the edge of all those incitements to diligence. The
teacher, instead of explaining to his pupils himself the science
in which he proposes to instruct them, may read some book upon
it; and if this book is written in a foreign and dead language,
by interpreting it to them into their own, or, what would give
him still less trouble, by making them interpret it to him, and
by now and then making an occasional remark upon it, he may
flatter himself that he is giving a lecture. The slightest
degree of knowledge and application will enable him to do this,
without exposing himself to contempt or derision, by saying any
thing that is really foolish, absurd, or ridiculous. The
discipline of the college, at the same time, may enable him to
force all his pupils to the most regular attendance upon his sham
lecture, and to maintain the most decent and respectful behaviour
during the whole time of the performance.
The discipline of colleges and universities is in general
contrived, not for the benefit of the students, but for the
interest, or, more properly speaking, for the ease of the
masters. Its object is, in all cases, to maintain the authority
of the master, and, whether he neglects or performs his duty, to
oblige the students in all cases to behave to him as if he
performed it with the greatest diligence and ability. It seems to
presume perfect wisdom and virtue in the one order, and the
greatest weakness and folly in the other. Where the masters,
however, really perform their duty, there are no examples, I
believe, that the greater part of the students ever neglect
theirs. No discipline is ever requisite to force attendance
upon lectures which are really worth the attending, as is well
known wherever any such lectures are given. Force and restraint
may, no doubt, be in some degree requisite, in order to oblige
children, or very young boys, to attend to those parts of
education, which it is thought necessary for them to acquire
during that early period of life ; but after twelve or thirteen
years of age, provided the master does his duty, force or
restraint can scarce ever be necessary to carry on any part of
education. Such is the generosity of the greater part of young
men, that so far from being disposed to neglect or despise the
instructions of their master, provided he shews some serious
intention of being of use to them, they are generally inclined to
pardon a great deal of incorrectness in the performance of his
duty, and sometimes even to conceal from the public a good deal
of gross negligence.
Those parts of education, it is to be observed, for the teaching
of which there are no public institutions, are generally the best
taught. When a young man goes to a fencing or a dancing school,
he does not, indeed, always learn to fence or to dance very well;
but he seldom fails of learning to fence or to dance. The good
effects of the riding school are not commonly so evident. The
expense of a riding school is so great, that in most places it is
a public institution. The three most essential parts of literary
education, to read, write, and account, it still continues to be
more common to acquire in private than in public schools; and it
very seldom happens, that anybody fails of acquiring them to the
degree in which it is necessary to acquire them.
In England, the public schools are much less corrupted than the
universities. In the schools, the youth are taught, or at least
may be taught, Greek and Latin; that is, everything which the
masters pretend to teach, or which it is expected they should
teach. In the universities, the youth neither are taught, nor
always can find any proper means of being taught the sciences,
which it is the business of those incorporated bodies to teach.
The reward of the schoolmaster, in most cases, depends
principally, in some cases almost entirely, upon the fees or
honoraries of his scholars. Schools have no exclusive privileges.
In order to obtain the honours of graduation, it is not necessary
that a person should bring a certificate of his having studied a
certain number of years at a public school. If, upon examination,
he appears to understand what is taught there, no questions are
asked about the place where he learnt it.
The parts of education which are commonly taught in universities,
it may perhaps be said, are not very well taught. But had it not
been for those institutions, they would not have been commonly
taught at all; and both the individual and the public would have
suffered a good deal from the want of those important parts of
education.
The present universities of Europe were originally, the greater
part of them, ecclesiastical corporations, instituted for the
education of churchmen. They were founded by the authority of the
pope; and were so entirely under his immediate protection, that
their members, whether masters or students, had all of them what
was then called the benefit of clergy, that is, were exempted
from the civil jurisdiction of the countries in which their
respective universities were situated, and were amenable only to
the ecclesiastical tribunals. What was taught in the greater part
of those universities was suitable to the end of their
institution, either theology, or something that was merely
preparatory to theology.
When Christianity was first established by law, a corrupted Latin
had become the common language of all the western parts of
Europe. The service of the church, accordingly, and the
translation of the Bible which were read in churches, were both
in that corrupted Latin; that is, in the common language of the
country, After the irruption of the barbarous nations who
overturned the Roman empire, Latin gradually ceased to be the
language of any part of Europe. But the reverence of the people
naturally preserves the established forms and ceremonies of
religion long after the circumstances which first introduced and
rendered them reasonable, are no more. Though Latin, therefore,
was no longer understood anywhere by the great body of the
people, the whole service of the church still continued to be
performed in that language. Two different languages were
thus established in Europe, in the same manner as in ancient
Egypt: a language of the priests, and a language of the people; a
sacred and a profane, a learned and an unlearned language. But it
was necessary that the priests should understand something of
that sacred and learned language in which they were to officiate;
and the study of the Latin language therefore made, from the
beginning, an essential part of university education.
It was not so with that either of the Greek or of the Hebrew
language. The infallible decrees of the church had pronounced the
Latin translation of the Bible, commonly called the Latin
Vulgate, to have been equally dictated by divine inspiration, and
therefore of equal authority with the Greek and Hebrew originals.
The knowledge of those two languages, therefore, not being
indispensably requsite to a churchman, the study of them did not
for along time make a necessary part of the common course of
university education. There are some Spanish universities, I
am assured, in which the study of the Greek language has never
yet made any part of that course. The first reformers found the
Greek text of the New Testament, and even the Hebrew text of the
Old, more favourable to their opinions than the vulgate
translation, which, as might naturally be supposed, had been
gradually accommodated to support the doctrines of the Catholic
Church. They set themselves, therefore, to expose the many errors
of that translation, which the Roman catholic clergy were thus
put under the necessity of defending or explaining. But this
could not well be done without some knowledge of the original
languages, of which the study was therefore gradually introduced
into the greater part of universities; both of those which
embraced, and of those which rejected, the doctrines of the
reformation. The Greek language was connected with every part of
that classical learning, which, though at first principally
cultivated by catholics and Italians, happened to come into
fashion much about the same time that the doctrines of the
reformation were set on foot. In the greater part of
universities, therefore, that language was taught previous to the
study of philosophy, and as soon as the student had made some
progress in the Latin. The Hebrew language having no connection
with classical learning, and, except the Holy Scriptures, being
the language of not a single book in any esteem the study of it
did not commonly commence till after that of philosophy, and when
the student had entered upon the study of theology.
Originally, the first rudiments, both of the Greek and Latin
languages, were taught in universities; and in some universities
they still continue to be so. In others, it is expected that the
student should have previously acquired, at least, the rudiments
of one or both of those languages, of which the study continues
to make everywhere a very considerable part of university
education.
The ancient Greek philosophy was divided into three great
branches; physics, or natural philosophy; ethics, or moral
philosophy; and logic. This general division seems perfectly
agreeable to the nature of things.
The great phenomena of nature, the revolutions of the heavenly
bodies, eclipses, comets; thunder and lightning, and other
extraordinary meteors; the generation, the life, growth, and
dissolution of plants and animals; are objects which, as they
necessarily excite the wonder, so they naturally call forth the
curiosity of mankind to inquire into their causes.
Superstition first attempted to satisfy this curiosity, by
referring all those wonderful appearances to the immediate a
gency of the gods. Philosophy afterwards endeavoured to account
for them from more familiar causes, or from such as mankind were
better acquainted with, than the agency of the gods. As those
great phenomena
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