.
| [Chapter III from the
book, Post-Prandial Philosophy, published 1894 in London by
Chatto & Windus] |
I mean what I say: science in education, not education in science.
It is the last of these that all the scientific men of England have so
long been fighting for. And a very good thing it is in its way, and I
hope they may get as much as they want of it. But compared to the
importance of science in education, education in science is a matter of
very small national moment.
The difference between the two is by no means a case of tweedledum and
tweedledee. Education in science means the systematic teaching of
science so as to train up boys to be scientific men. Now scientific men
are exceedingly useful members of a community; and so are engineers, and
bakers, and blacksmiths, and artists, and chimney-sweeps. But we can't
all be bakers, and we can't all be painters in water-colours. There is a
dim West Country legend to the effect that the inhabitants of the Scilly
Isles eke out a precarious livelihood by taking in one another's
washing. As a matter of practical political economy, such a source of
income is worse than precariousit's frankly impossible. "It
takes all sorts to make a world." A community entirely composed of
scientific men would fail to feed itself, clothe itself, house itself,
and keep itself supplied with amusing light literature. In one word,
education in science produces specialists; and specialists, though most
useful and valuable persons in their proper place, are no more the
staple of a civilised community than engine-drivers or ballet-dancers.
What the world at large really needs, and will one day get, is not
this, but due recognition of the true value of science in education. We
don't all want to be made into first-class anatomists like Owen, still
less into first-class practical surgeons, like Sir Henry Thompson. But
what we do all want is a competent general knowledge (amongst other
things) of anatomy at large, and especially of human anatomy; of
physiology at large, and especially of human physiology. We don't all
want to be analytical chemists: but what we do all want is to know as
much about oxygen and carbon as will enable us to understand the
commonest phenomena of combustion, of chemical combination, of animal or
vegetable life. We don't all want to be zoologists, and botanists of the
type who put their names after "critical species:" but what we
do all want to know is as much about plants and animals as will enable
us to walk through life intelligently, and to understand the meaning of
the things that surround us. We want, in one word, a general
acquaintance with the results rather than with the methods of science.
"In short," says the specialist, with his familiar sneer, "you
want a smattering."
Well, yes, dear Sir Smelfungus, if it gives you pleasure to put it sojust
that; a smattering, an all-round smattering. But remember that in this
matter the man of science is always influenced by ideas derived from his
own pursuits as specialist. He is for ever thinking what sort of
education will produce more specialists in future; and as a rule he is
thinking what sort of education will produce men capable in future of
advancing science. Now to advance science, to discover new snails, or
invent new ethyl compounds, is not and cannot be the main object of the
mass of humanity. What the mass wants is just unspecialised knowledgethe
kind of knowledge that enables men to get comfortably and creditably and
profitably through life, to meet emergencies as they rise, to know their
way through the world, to use their faculties in all circumstances to
the best advantage. And for this purpose what is wanted is, not the
methods, but the results of science.
One science, and one only, is rationally taught in our schools at
present. I mean geography. And the example of geography is so eminently
useful for illustrating the difference I am trying to point out, that I
will venture to dwell upon it for a moment in passing. It is good for us
all to know that the world is round, without its being necessary for
every one of us to follow in detail the intricate reasoning by which
that result has been arrived at. It is good for us all to know the
position of New York and Rio and Calcutta on the map, without its being
necessary for us to understand, far less to work out for ourselves, the
observations and calculations which fixed their latitude and longitude.
Knowledge of the map is a good thing in itself, though it is a very
different thing indeed from the technical knowledge which enables a man
to make a chart of an unknown region, or to explore and survey it.
Furthermore, it is a form of knowledge far more generally useful. A fair
acquaintance with the results embodied in the atlas, in the gazetteer,
in Baedeker, and in Bradshaw, is much oftener useful to us on our way
through the world than a special acquaintance with the methods of
map-making. It would be absurd to say that because a man is not going to
be a Stanley or a Nansen, therefore it is no good for him to learn
geography. It would be absurd to say that unless he learned geography in
accordance with its methods instead of its results, he could have but a
smattering, and that a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. A little
knowledge of the position of New York is indeed a dangerous thing, if a
man uses it to navigate a Cunard vessel across the Atlantic. But the
absence of the smattering is a much more dangerous and fatal thing if
the man wishes to do business with the Argentine and the Transvaal, or
to enter into practical relations of any sort with anybody outside his
own parish. The results of geography are useful and valuable in
themselves, quite apart from the methods employed in obtaining them.
It is just the same with all the other sciences. There is nothing
occult or mysterious about them. No just cause or impediment exists why
we should insist on being ignorant of the orbits of the planets because
we cannot ourselves make the calculations for determining them; no
reason why we should insist on being ignorant of the classification of
plants and animals because we don't feel able ourselves to embark on
anatomical researches which would justify us in coming to original
conclusions about them. I know the mass of scientific opinion has always
gone the other way; but then scientific opinion means only the opinion
of men of science, who are themselves specialists, and who think most of
the education needed to make men specialists, not of the education
needed to fit them for the general exigencies and emergencies of life.
We don't want authorities on the Cucurbitaceæ, but well-informed
citizens. Professor Huxley is not our best guide in these matters, but
Mr. Herbert Spencer, who long ago, in his book on Education, sketched
out a radical programme of instruction in that knowledge which is of
most worth, such as no country, no college, no school in Europe has ever
yet been bold enough to put into practice.
What common sense really demands, then, is education in the main
results of all the sciencesa knowledge of what is known, not
necessarily a knowledge of each successive step by which men came to
know it. At present, of course, in all our schools in England there is
no systematic teaching of knowledge at all; what replaces it is a
teaching of the facts of language, and for the most part of useless
facts, or even of exploded fictions. Our public schools, especially (by
which phrase we never mean real public schools like the board schools at
all, but merely schools for the upper and the middle classes) are in
their existing stage primarily great gymnasiumsvery good things,
too, in their way, against which I have not a word of blame; and,
secondarily, places for imparting a sham and imperfect knowledge of some
few philological facts about two extinct languages. Pupils get a
smattering of Homer and Cicero. That is literally all the equipment for
life that the cleverest and most industrious boys can ever take away
from them. The sillier or idler don't take away even that. As to the "mental
training" argument, so often trotted out, it is childish enough not
to be worth answering. Which is most practically useful to us in lifeknowledge
of Latin grammar or knowledge of ourselves and the world we live in,
physical, social, moral? That is the question.
The truth is, schoolmastering in Britain has become a vast vested
interest in the hands of men who have nothing to teach us. They try to
bolster up their vicious system by such artificial arguments as the "mental
training" fallacy. Forced to admit the utter uselessness of the
pretended knowledge they impart, they fall back upon the plea of its
supposed occult value as intellectual discipline. They say in effect:"This
sawdust we offer you contains no food, we know: but then see how it
strengthens the jaws to chew it!" Besides, look at our results! The
typical John Bull! pig-headed, ignorant, brutal. Are we really such
immense successes ourselves that we must needs perpetuate the mould that
warped us?
The one fatal charge brought against the public school system is that "after
all, it turns out English gentlemen!"
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