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Education
INTELLECTUAL
WE NOW
come to the intellectual part
of education, which is certainly a larger and more difficult, although not more important than physical training and edification of character. The Indian University system has confined
itself entirely to this branch and it might have been thought
that this limitation and concentration of energy ought to have
been attended by special efficiency and thoroughness in the
single branch it had chosen. But unfortunately this is not the
case. If the physical training it provides is contemptible and
the moral training nil, the mental training is also meagre in quantity and worthless in quality. People commonly say that it is
because the services and professions are made the object of education that this state of things exists. This I believe to be a great
mistake. A degree is necessary for service and therefore people
try to get a degree. Good! let it remain so. But in order for a
student to get a degree let us make it absolutely necessary that
he shall have a good education. If a worthless education is sufficient in order to secure this object and a good education quite
unessential, it is obvious that the student will not incur great
trouble and diversion of energy in order to acquire what he feels
to be unnecessary. But change this state of things, make culture
and true science essential and the same interested motive which
now makes him content with a bad education will then compel
him to strive after culture and true science. As practical men we
must recognise that the pure enthusiasm of knowledge for
knowledge's sake operates only in exceptional minds or in exceptional eras. In civilised countries a general desire for knowledge
as a motive for education does exist but it is largely accompanied
with the earthier feeling that knowledge is necessary to keep up
one's position in society or to succeed in certain lucrative or
respectable pursuits or professions. We in India have become so
barbarous that we send our children to school with the grossest
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utilitarian motive unmixed with any disinterested desire for
knowledge; but the education we receive is itself responsible for
this. Nobody can cherish disinterested enthusiasm for a bad
education; it can only be regarded as a means to some practical
end. But make the education good, thorough and interesting
and the love of knowledge will of itself awake in the mind and so
mingle with and modify more selfish objects.
The source of the evil we complain of is therefore something
different; it is a fundamental and deplorable error by which we
in this country have confused education with the acquisition of
knowledge and interpreted knowledge itself in a singularly
narrow and illiberal sense. To give the student knowledge is necessary, but it is still more necessary to build up in him the power
of knowledge. It would hardly be a good technical education for
a carpenter to be taught how to fell trees so as to provide himself
with wood and never to learn how to prepare tables and chairs
and cabinets or even what tools were necessary for his craft. Yet
this is precisely what our system of education does. It trains the
memory and provides the student with a store of facts and secondhand ideas. The memory is the woodcutter's axe and the store
he acquires is the wood he has cut down in his course of tree-felling. When he has done this, the University says to him, "We
now declare you a Bachelor of Carpentry, we have given you a
good and sharp axe and a fair nucleus of wood to begin with.
Go on, my son, the world is full of forests and, provided the
Forest Officer does not object, you can cut down trees and provide yourself with wood to your heart's content." Now the
student who goes forth thus equipped, may become a great timber
merchant but, unless he is an exceptional genius, he will never
be even a moderate carpenter. Or to return from the simile to
the facts, the graduate from our colleges may be a good clerk, a
decent vakil or a tolerable medical practitioner, but unless he is an
exceptional genius, he will never be a great administrator or a
great lawyer or an eminent medical specialist. These eminences
have to be filled up mainly by Europeans. If an Indian wishes
to rise to them, he has to travel thousands of miles over the sea
in order to breathe an atmosphere of liberal knowledge, original
science and sound culture. And even then he seldom succeeds,
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because his lungs are too debilitated to take in a good long breath
of that atmosphere.
The first fundamental mistake has been, therefore, to confine ourselves to the training of the storing faculty memory and
the storage of facts and to neglect the training of the three great
using (manipulating) faculties, viz. the power of reasoning, the power of
comparison and differentiation and the power of expression. These powers are present to a certain extent in all men
above the state of the savage and even in a rudimentary state in
the savage himself; but they exist especially developed in the
higher classes of civilised nations, wherever these higher classes
have long centuries of education behind them. But however highly developed by
nature these powers demand cultivation, they demand that bringing out of natural abilities which is the real
essence of education. If not brought out in youth, they become
rusted and stopped with dirt, so that they cease to act except in
a feeble, narrow and partial manner. Exceptional genius does
indeed assert itself in spite of neglect and discouragement, but
even genius self-developed does not achieve as happy results
and as free and large a working as the same genius properly
equipped and trained. Amount of knowledge is in itself not of
first importance, but to make the best use of what we know. The
easy assumption of our educationists that we have only to supply
the mind with a smattering of facts in each department of knowledge and the mind can be trusted to develop itself and take its
own suitable road is contrary to science, contrary to human
experience and contrary to the universal opinion of civilised
countries. Indeed, the history of intellectual degeneration in
gifted races always begins with the arrest of these three mental
powers by the excessive cultivation of mere knowledge at their
expense. Much as we have lost as a nation, we have always
preserved our intellectual alertness, quickness and originality; but even this last gift is threatened by our University system, and
if it goes, it will be the beginning of irretrievable degradation and
final extinction.
The very first step in reform must therefore be to revolutionise the whole aim and method of our education. We must
accustom teachers to devote nine-tenths of their energy to the
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education of the active mental faculties while the passive
and retaining faculty, which we call the memory, should occupy a recognised and
well-defined but subordinate place and we must
direct our school and university examinations to the testing of
these active faculties and not of the memory. For this is an object which cannot be affected by the mere change or
rearrangement of the curriculum. It is true that certain subjects are more
apt to develop certain faculties than others; the power of accurate reasoning is powerfully assisted by Geometry, Logic
and
Political Economy; one of the most important results of languages is to refine and train the power of expression and
nothing
more enlarges the power of comparison and differentiation than
an intelligent study of history. But no particular subject except
language is essential, still less exclusively appropriate to any
given faculty. There are types of intellect, for instance, which are
constitutionally incapable of dealing with geometrical problems
or even with the formal machinery of Logic, and are yet profound, brilliant and correct reasoners in other intellectual
spheres. There is in fact hardly any subject, the sciences of calculation
excepted, which in the hands of a capable teacher does
not give room for the development of all the general faculties
of the mind. The first thing needed therefore is the entire and unsparing rejection of the present methods of teaching in
favour
of those which are now being universally adopted in the more
advanced countries of Europe.
But even in this narrower sphere of knowledge acquisition
to which our system has confined itself, it has been guilty of other blunders
quite as serious. Apart from pure mathematics, which stands on a footing of its
own, knowledge may be divided
into two great heads, the knowledge of things and the knowledge of men, that is to say, of human thought, human
actions,
human nature and human creations as recorded, preserved or
pictured in literature, history, philosophy and art. The
covered is covered in the term humanities or humane letters and the idea of a liberal
education was formerly confined to these, though it was
subsequently widened to include mathematics and has again been
widened in modern times to include a modicum of science. The humanities, mathematics and science are therefore
the three
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sisters in the family of knowledge and any self-respecting system
of education must in these days provide facilities for mastery in
any one of these as well as for a modicum of all. The first great
error of our system comes in here. While we insist on passing our
students through a rigid and cast-iron course of knowledge in
everything, we give them real knowledge in nothing. Mathematics, for instance, is a subject in which it ought not to be
difficult to give thorough knowledge, most of the paths are well
beaten and, being a precise and definite subject, it does not in
itself demand such serious powers of original thought and appreciation as literature and history; yet it is the invariable experience
of the most brilliant mathematical students who go from Calcutta to Bombay to Cambridge that after the first year they have
exhausted all they have already learned and have to enter on
entirely new and unfamiliar result. It is surely a deplorable
thing that it should be impossible to acquire a thorough mathematical education in India, that one should have to go thousands
of miles and spend thousands of rupees to get it. Again, if we
look at science, what is the result of the pitiful modicum of
science acquired under our system ? At the best it turns out good
teachers who can turn others through the same mill in which
they themselves have been ground...
(Incomplete)
NOTE: There seem to have been other articles in this series but only this one has come
to light.
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