You are responsible for reading the following excerpts from Book One and Two of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Emile, or On Education published in 1762.
Also here is a link to the entire book if you are interested in reading more of it https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/rousseau-emile-or-education
BOOK I
God
makes all things good; man meddles with them and they become evil. He
forces one soil to yield the products of another, one tree to bear
another’s fruit. He confuses and confounds time, place, and natural
conditions. He mutilates his dog, his horse, and his slave. He destroys
and defaces all things; he loves all that is deformed and monstrous; he
will have nothing as nature made it, not even man himself, who must
learn his paces like a saddle-horse, and be shaped to his master’s taste
like the trees in his garden.
...Plants are
fashioned by cultivation, man by education. If a man were born tall and
strong, his size and strength would be of no good to him till he had
learnt to use them; they would even harm him by preventing others from
coming to his aid;
left to himself he would die of want before he knew his needs. We
lament the helplessness of infancy; we fail to perceive that the race
would have perished had not man begun by being a child.
We are born weak,
we need strength; helpless, we need aid; foolish, we need reason. All
that we lack at birth, all that we need when we come to man’s estate, is
the gift of education.
This education
comes to us from nature, from men, or from things. The inner growth of
our organs and faculties is the education of nature, the use we learn to
make of this growth is the education of men, what we gain by our
experience of our surroundings is the education of things.
Thus we are each
taught by three masters. If their teaching conflicts, the scholar is
ill-educated and will never be at peace with himself; if their teaching
agrees, he goes straight to his goal, he lives at peace with himself, he
is well-educated.
Now of these three
factors in education nature is wholly beyond our control, things are
only partly in our power; the education of men is the only one
controlled by us; and even here our power is largely illusory, for who
can hope to direct every word and deed of all with whom the child has to
do.
Viewed as an art,
the success of education is almost impossible, since the essential
conditions of success are beyond our control. Our efforts may bring us
within sight of the goal, but fortune must favour us if we are to reach
it.
What is this goal?
As we have just shown, it is the goal of nature. Since all three modes
of education must work together, the two that we can control must follow
the lead of that which is beyond our control. Perhaps this word Nature
has too vague a meaning. Let us try to define it.
Nature, we are
told, is merely habit. What does that mean? Are there not habits formed
under compulsion, habits which never stifle nature? Such, for example,
are the habits of plants trained horizontally. The plant keeps its
artificial shape, but the sap has not changed its course, and any new
growth the plant may make will be vertical. It is the same with a man’s
disposition; while the conditions remain the same, habits, even the
least natural of them, hold good; but change the conditions, habits
vanish, nature reasserts
herself. Education itself is but habit, for are there not people who
forget or lose their education and others who keep it? Whence comes this
difference? If the term nature is to be restricted to habits
conformable to nature we need say no more.
We are born
sensitive and from our birth onwards we are affected in various ways by
our environment. As soon as we become conscious of our sensations we
tend to seek or shun the things that cause them, at first because they
are pleasant or unpleasant, then because they suit us or not, and at
last because of judgments formed by means of the ideas of happiness and
goodness which reason gives us. These tendencies gain strength and
permanence with the growth of reason, but hindered by our habits they
are more or less warped by our prejudices. Before this change they are
what I call Nature within us.
BOOK II
Do you know the
surest way to make your child miserable? Let him have everything he
wants; for as his wants increase in proportion to the ease with which
they are satisfied, you will be compelled, sooner or later, to refuse
his demands, and this unlooked-for refusal will hurt him more than the
lack of what he wants. He will want your stick first, then your watch,
the bird that flies, or the star that shines above him. He will want all
he sets eyes on, and unless you were God himself, how could you satisfy
him?
Man naturally
considers all that he can get as his own. In this sense Hobbes’ theory
is true to a certain extent: Multiply both our wishes and the means of
satisfying them, and each will be master of all. Thus the child, who has
only to ask and have, thinks himself the master of the universe; he
considers all men as his slaves; and when you are at last compelled to
refuse, he takes your refusal as an act of rebellion, for he thinks he
has only to command. All the reasons you give him, while he is still too
young to reason, are so many pretences in his eyes; they seem to him
only unkindness; the sense of injustice embitters his disposition; he
hates every one. Though he has never felt grateful for kindness, he
resents all opposition.
How should I
suppose that such a child can ever be happy? He is the slave of anger, a
prey to the fiercest passions. Happy! He is a tyrant, at once the
basest of slaves and the most wretched of creatures. I have known
children brought up like this who expected you to knock the house down,
to give them the weather-cock on the steeple, to stop a regiment on the
march so that they might listen to the band; when they could not get their way they screamed and
cried and would pay no attention to any one. In vain everybody strove
to please them; as their desires were stimulated by the ease with which
they got their own way, they set their hearts on impossibilities, and
found themselves face to face with opposition and difficulty, pain and
grief. Scolding, sulking, or in a rage, they wept and cried all day.
Were they really so greatly favoured? Weakness, combined with love of
power, produces nothing but folly and suffering. One spoilt child beats
the table; another whips the sea. They may beat and whip long enough
before they find contentment.
...... Treat your pupil according to his age. Put him in his place from the first, and keep him there so well that he does not try to leave it. Then before he knows what wisdom is, he will be practising its most important lesson. Never command him to do anything, whatever in the world it may be. Do not let him even imagine that you claim to have any authority over him. He must know only that he is weak and you are strong, that his condition and yours put him at your mercy.
Let him know this, let him learn it, let him feel it. At an early age let his haughty head feel the heavy yoke which nature imposes upon man, the heavy yoke of necessity under which every finite being must bow. Let him see this necessity in things, not in the whims of man. Let the curb that restrains him be force, not authority. If there is something he should not do, do not forbid him, but prevent him without explanation or reasoning. What you grant him, grant it at his first word without sollicitations or pleading, above all without conditions. Grant with pleasure, refuse only with repugnance; but let your refusal be irrevocable so that no entreaties move you. Let your "No," once uttered, be a wall of bronze against which the child may have to exhaust his strength five or six times in order not to be tempted again to overthrow it....
.....The first education ought thus to be purely negative. It consists not at all in teaching virtue or truth, but in preserving the heart from vice and the mind from error. If you could do nothing and let nothing be done, if you could bring your pupil healthy and robust to the age of twelve without knowing how to distinguish his right hand from his left, the eyes of his understanding would be open to reason as soon as you began to teach him. Without prejudice and without habits, there would be nothing in him to counteract the effects of your labours. In your hands he would soon become the wisest of men; by doing nothing to begin with, you would end with a prodigy of education....
....Since they want their child to be a doctor instead of a child, fathers and teachers think it never too soon to scold, correct, reprimand, flatter, threaten, promise, instruct, and reason. Do better than they; be reasonable and do not reason with your pupil. More especially do not try to make him approve of what he dislikes; for if reason is always connected with disagreeable matters, you make it distasteful to him. . . . Exercise his body, his limbs, his senses, his strength, but keep his mind idle as long as you can. . . . To prevent the birth of evil do not hasten to do good, for goodness is only possible when enlightened by reason. . . . Let childhood to ripen in children. . . .
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