Education, Volumen51New England Publishing Company, 1931 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 53
Página 283
... culture for its own sake has a tendency to lead us too far away from the tangible realities of life . Culture's purpose is to create ideals , but if the ideals are not true to life , or lack adaptability to our existing conditions ...
... culture for its own sake has a tendency to lead us too far away from the tangible realities of life . Culture's purpose is to create ideals , but if the ideals are not true to life , or lack adaptability to our existing conditions ...
Página 284
... culture is " sweetness and light " ; the motto of Christian life is righteousness and peace . Artistic perfection is the ambition of one ; moral recti- tude is the demand of the other . The guide of culture is taste ; of Christianity ...
... culture is " sweetness and light " ; the motto of Christian life is righteousness and peace . Artistic perfection is the ambition of one ; moral recti- tude is the demand of the other . The guide of culture is taste ; of Christianity ...
Página 286
... culture whose watchword is sweetness and light , it is too slight for one who is the heir to immor- tality . If this sweetness has no song for the mourner and if this light fails us when we enter " that shadow feared of man , " then ...
... culture whose watchword is sweetness and light , it is too slight for one who is the heir to immor- tality . If this sweetness has no song for the mourner and if this light fails us when we enter " that shadow feared of man , " then ...
Contenido
412379 | 12 |
Literature and the American College Berenice Cooper 275 | 27 |
Resurrection Dr Frederick H Adler | 49 |
Otras 39 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
ability activities administration American American Library Association attendance attitude beautiful better boys and girls cent character child child labor classroom teacher Columbia University coöperation course culture curriculum Danny Deever drama educa Educational Psychology English environment experience fact faculty father give grade graduate grammar high school ideals Indian INDIAN MOUNTAIN SCHOOL individual institutions instruction instructor intelligence intelligence quotients interest knowledge learning literature living Massachusetts means Menlo School ment method mind moral National normal school organization parents period person philosophy play practice present principal private school problems profes professor psychology public schools pupils question radio education salary social song superintendent Teachers College teaching tests things tion University vocational William Gilmore Simms write young