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Book Five
Of the Revenue of the Sovereign or Commonwealth.
CHAPTER I
Of the Expenses of the Sovereign or Commonwealth
PART 3
Of the Expense of Public Works and Public Institutions
ARTICLE II
Of the Expense of the Institutions for the Education of
Youth
The institutions for the education of the youth may, in the
same manner, furnish a revenue sufficient for defraying their own
expense. The fee or honorary which the scholar pays to the master
naturally constitutes a revenue of this kind.
Even where the reward of the master does not arise
altogether from this natural revenue, it still is not necessary
that it should be derived from that general revenue of the
society, of which the collection and application is, in most
countries, assigned to the executive power. Through the greater
part of Europe, accordingly, the endowment of schools and
colleges makes either no charge upon that general revenue, or but
a very small one. It everywhere arises chiefly from some local or
provincial revenue, from the rent of some landed estate, or from
the interest of some sum of money allotted and put under the
management of trustees for this particular purpose, sometimes by
the sovereign himself, and sometimes by some private donor.
Have those public endowments contributed in general to
promote the end of their institution? Have they contributed to
encourage the diligence and to improve the abilities of the
teachers? Have they directed the course of education towards
objects more useful, both to the individual and to the public,
than those to which it would naturally have gone of its own
accord? It should not seem very difficult to give at least a
probable answer to each of those questions.
In every profession, the exertion of the greater part of
those who exercise it is always in proportion to the necessity
they are under of making that exertion. This necessity is
greatest with those to whom the emoluments of their profession
are the only source from which they expect their fortune, or even
their ordinary revenue and subsistence. In order to acquire this
fortune, or even to get this subsistence, they must, in the
course of a year, execute a certain quantity of work of a known
value; and, where the competition is free, the rivalship of
competitors, who are all endeavouring to justle one another out
of employment, obliges every man to endeavour to execute his work
with a certain degree of exactness. The greatness of the objects
which are to be acquired by success in some particular
professions may, no doubt, sometimes animate the exertion of a
few men of extraordinary spirit and ambition. Great objects,
however, are evidently not necessary in order to occasion the
greatest exertions. Rivalship and emulation render excellency,
even in mean professions, an object of ambition, and frequently
occasion the very greatest exertions. Great objects, on the
contrary, alone and unsupported by the necessity of application,
have seldom been sufficient to occasion any considerable
exertion. In England, success in the profession of the law leads
to some very great objects of ambition; and yet how few men, born
to easy fortunes, have ever in this country been eminent in that
profession!
The endowments of schools and colleges have necessarily
diminished more or less the necessity of application in the
teachers. Their subsistence, so far as it arises from their
salaries, is evidently derived from a fund altogether independent
of their success and reputation in their particular professions.
In some universities the salary makes but a part, and
frequently but a small part, of the emoluments of the teacher, of
which the greater part arises from the honoraries or fees of his
pupils. The necessity of application, though always more or less
diminished, is not in this case entirely taken away. Reputation
in his profession is still of some importance to him, and he
still has some dependency upon the affection, gratitude, and
favourable report of those who have attended upon his
instructions; and these favourable sentiments he is likely to
gain in no way so well as by deserving them, that is, by the
abilities and diligence with which he discharges every part of
his duty.
In other universities the teacher is prohibited from
receiving any honorary or fee from his pupils, and his salary
constitutes the whole of the revenue which he derives from his
office. His interest is, in this case, set as directly in
opposition to his duty as it is possible to set it. It is the
interest of every man to live as much at his ease as he can; and
if his emoluments are to be precisely the same, whether he does
or does not perform some very laborious duty, it is certainly his
interest, at least as interest is vulgarly understood, either to
neglect it altogether, or, if he is subject to some authority
which will not suffer him to do this, to perform it in as
careless and slovenly a manner as that authority will permit. If
he is naturally active and a lover of labour, it is his interest
to employ that activity in any way from which he can derive some
advantage, rather than in the performance of his duty, from which
he can derive none.
If the authority to which he is subject resides in the body
corporate, the college, or university, of which he himself is a
member, and which the greater part of the other members are, like
himself, persons who either are or ought to be teachers, they are
likely to make a common cause, to be all very indulgent to one
another, and every man to consent that his neighbour may neglect
his duty, provided he himself is allowed to neglect his own. In
the university of Oxford, the greater part of the public
professors have, for these many years, given up altogether even
the pretence of teaching.
If the authority to which he is subject resides, not so much
in the body corporate of which he is a member, as in some other
extraneous persons- in the bishop of the diocese, for example; in
the governor of the province; or, perhaps, in some minister of
state it is not indeed in this case very likely that he will be
suffered to neglect his duty altogether. All that such superiors,
however, can force him to do, is to attend upon his pupils a
certain number of hours, that is, to give a certain number of
lectures in the week or in the year. What those lectures shall be
must still depend upon the diligence of the teacher; and that
diligence is likely to be proportioned to the motives which he
has for exerting it. An extraneous jurisdiction of this kind,
besides, is liable to be exercised both ignorantly and
capriciously. In its nature it is arbitrary and discretionary,
and the persons who exercise it, neither attending upon the
lectures of the teacher themselves, nor perhaps understanding the
sciences which it is his business to teach, are seldom capable of
exercising it with judgment. From the insolence of office, too,
they are frequently indifferent how they exercise it, and are
very apt to censure or deprive him of his office wantonly, and
without any just cause. The person subject to such jurisdiction
is necessarily degraded by it, and, instead of being one of the
most respectable, is rendered one of the meanest and most
contemptible persons in the society. It is by powerful protection
only that he can effectually guard himself against the bad usage
to which he is at all times exposed; and this protection he is
most likely to gain, not by ability or diligence in his
profession, but by obsequiousness to the will of his superiors,
and by being ready, at all times, to sacrifice to that will the
rights, the interest, and the honour of the body corporate of
which he is a member. Whoever has attended for any considerable
time to the administration of a French university must have had
occasion to remark the effects which naturally result from an
arbitrary and extraneous jurisdiction of this kind.
Whatever forces a certain number of students to any college
or university, independent of the merit or reputation of the
teachers, tends more or less to diminish the necessity of that
merit or reputation.
The privileges of graduates in arts, in law, physic, and
divinity, when they can be obtained only by residing a certain
number of years in certain universities, necessarily force a
certain number of students to such universities, independent of
the merit or reputation of the teachers. The privileges of
graduates are a sort of statutes of apprenticeship, which have
contributed to the improvement of education, just as the other
statutes of apprenticeship have to that of arts, and
manufactures.
The charitable foundations of scholarships, exhibitions,
bursaries, etc., necessarily attach a certain number of students
to certain colleges, independent altogether of the merit of those
particular colleges. Were the students upon such charitable
foundations left free to choose what college they liked best,
such liberty might perhaps contribute to excite some emulation
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
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, or saying anything 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 this 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 shows 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 was 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 requisite to a churchman, the study of them did not
for a long 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 favorable 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, 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 agency 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 are
the first objects of human curiosity, so the science which
pretends to explain them must naturally have been the first
branch of philosophy that was cultivated. The first philosophers,
accordingly, of whom history has preserved any account, appear to
have been natural philosophers.
In every age and country of the world men must have attended
to the characters, designs, and actions of one another, and many
reputable rules and maxims for the conduct of human life must
have been laid down and approved of by common consent. As soon as
writing came into fashion, wise men, or those who fancied
themselves such, would naturally endeavour to increase the number
of those established and respected maxims, and to express their
own sense of what was either proper or improper conduct,
sometimes in the more artificial form of apologues, like what are
called the fables of Aesop; and sometimes in the more simple one
of apophthegms, or wise sayings, like the Proverbs of Solomon,
the verses of Theognis and Phocyllides, and some part of the
works of Hesiod. They might continue in this manner for a long
time merely to multiply the number of those maxims of prudence
and morality, without even attempting to arrange them in any very
distinct or methodical order, much less to connect them together
by one or more general principles from which they were all
deducible, like effects from their natural causes. The beauty of
a systematical arrangement of different observations connected by
a few common principles was first seen in the rude essays of
those ancient times towards a system of natural philosophy.
Something of the same kind was afterwards attempted in morals.
The maxims of common life were arranged in some methodical order,
and connected together by a few common principles, in the same
manner as they had attempted to arrange and connect the phenomena
of nature. The science which pretends to investigate and explain
those connecting principles is what is properly called moral
philosophy.
Different authors gave different systems both of natural and
moral philosophy. But the arguments by which they supported those
different systems, for from being always demonstrations, were
frequently at best but very slender probabilities, and sometimes
mere sophisms, which had no other foundation but the inaccuracy
and ambiguity of common language. Speculative systems have in all
ages of the world been adopted for reasons too frivolous to have
determined the judgment of any man of common sense in a matter of
the smallest pecuniary interest. Gross sophistry has scarce ever
had any influence upon the opinions of mankind, except in matters
of philosophy and speculation; and in these it has frequently had
the greatest. The patrons of each system of natural and moral
philosophy naturally endeavoured to expose the weakness of the
arguments adduced to support the systems which were opposite to
their own. In examining those arguments, they were necessarily
led to consider the difference between a probable and a
demonstrative argument, between a fallacious and a conclusive
one: and Logic, or the science of the general principles of good
and bad reasoning, necessarily arose out of the observations
which a scrutiny of this kind gave occasion to. Though in its
origin posterior both to physics and to ethics, it was commonly
taught, not indeed in all, but in the greater part of the ancient
schools of philosophy, previously to either of those sciences.
The student, it seems to have been thought, to understand well
the difference between good and bad reasoning before he was led
to reason upon subjects of so great importance.
This ancient division of philosophy into three parts was in
the greater part of the universities of Europe changed for
another into five.
In the ancient philosophy, whatever was taught concerning
the nature either of the human mind or of the Deity, made a part
of the system of physics. Those beings, in whatever their essence
might be supposed to consist, were parts of the great system of
the universe, and parts, too, productive of the most important
effects. Whatever human reason could either conclude or
conjecture concerning them, made, as it were, two chapters,
though no doubt two very important ones, of the science which
pretended to give an account of the origin and revolutions of the
great system of the universe. But in the universities of Europe,
where philosophy was taught only as subservient to theology, it
was natural to dwell longer upon these two chapters than upon any
other of the science. They were gradually more and more extended,
and were divided into many inferior chapters, till at last the
doctrine of spirits, of which so little can be known, came to
take up as much room in the system of philosophy as the doctrine
of bodies, of which so much can be known. The doctrines
concerning those two subjects were considered as making two
distinct sciences. What are called Metaphysics or Pneumatics were
set in opposition to Physics, and were cultivated not only as the
more sublime, but, for the purposes of a particular profession,
as the more useful science of the two. The proper subject of
experiment and observation, a subject in which a careful
attention is capable of making so many useful discoveries, was
almost entirely neglected. The subject in which, after a few very
simple and almost obvious truths, the most careful attention can
discover nothing but obscurity and uncertainty, and can
consequently produce nothing but subtleties and sophisms, was
greatly cultivated.
When those two sciences had thus been set in opposition to
one another, the comparison between them naturally gave birth to
a third, to what was called Ontology, or the science which
treated of the qualities and attributes which were common to both
the subjects of the other two sciences. But if subtleties and
sophisms composed the greater part of the Metaphysics or
Pneumatics of the schools, they composed the whole of this cobweb
science of Ontology, which was likewise sometimes called
Metaphysics.
Wherein consisted the happiness and perfection of a man,
considered not only as an individual, but as the member of a
family, of a state, and of the great society of mankind, was the
object which the ancient moral philosophy proposed to
investigate. In that philosophy the duties of human life were
treated as subservient to the happiness and perfection of human
life. But when moral, as well as natural philosophy, came to be
taught only as subservient to theology, the duties of human life
were treated of as chiefly subservient to the happiness of a life
to come. In the ancient philosophy the perfection of virtue was
represented as necessarily productive, to the person who
possessed it, of the most perfect happiness in this life. In the
modern philosophy it was frequently represented as generally, or
rather as almost always, inconsistent with any degree of
happiness in this life; and heaven was to be earned only by
penance and mortification, by the austerities and abasement of a
monk; not by the liberal, generous, and spirited conduct of a
man. Casuistry and an ascetic morality made up, in most cases,
the greater part of the moral philosophy of the schools. By far
the most important of all the different branches of philosophy
became in this manner by far the most corrupted.
Such, therefore, was the common course of philosophical
education in the greater part of the universities in Europe.
Logic was taught first: Ontology came in the second place:
Pneumatology, comprehending the doctrine concerning the nature of
the human soul and of the Deity, in the third: in the fourth
followed a debased system of moral philosophy which was
considered as immediately connected with the doctrines of
Pneumatology, with the immortality of the human soul, and with
the rewards and punishments which, from the justice of the Deity,
were to be expected in a life to come: a short and superficial
system of Physics usually concluded the course.
The alterations which the universities of Europe thus
introduced into the ancient course of philosophy were all meant
for the education of ecclesiastics, and to render it a more
proper introduction to the study of theology. But the additional
quantity of subtlety and sophistry, the casuistry and the ascetic
morality which those alterations introduced into it, certainly
did not render it more proper for the education of gentlemen or
men of the world, or more likely either to improve the
understanding, or to mend the heart.
This course of philosophy is what still continues to be
taught in the greater part of the universities of Europe, with
more or less diligence, according as the constitution of each
particular university happens to render diligence more or less
necessary to the teachers. In some of the richest and best
endowed universities, the tutors content themselves with teaching
a few unconnected shreds and parcels of this corrupted course;
and even these they commonly teach very negligently and
superficially.
The improvements which, in modern times, have been made in
several different branches of philosophy have not, the greater
part of them, been made in universities, though some no doubt
have. The greater part of universities have not even been very
forward to adopt those improvements after they were made; and
several of those learned societies have chosen to remain, for a
long time, the sanctuaries in which exploded systems and obsolete
prejudices found shelter and protection after they had been
hunted out of every other corner of the world. In general, the
richest and best endowed universities have been the slowest in
adopting those improvements, and the most averse to permit any
considerable change in the established plan of education. Those
improvements were more easily introduced into some of the poorer
universities, in which the teachers, depending upon their
reputation for the greater part of their subsistence, were
obliged to pay more attention to the current opinions of the
world.
But though the public schools and universities of Europe
were originally intended only for the education of a particular
profession, that of churchmen; and though they were not always
very diligent in instructing their pupils even in the sciences
which were supposed necessary for that profession, yet they
gradually drew to themselves the education of almost all other
people, particularly of almost all gentlemen and men of fortune.
No better method, it seems, could be fallen upon of spending,
with any advantage, the long interval between infancy and that
period of life at which men begin to apply in good earnest to the
real business of the world, the business which is to employ them
during the remainder of their days. The greater part of what is
taught in schools and universities, however, does not seem to be
the most proper preparation for that business.
In England it becomes every day more and more the custom to
send young people to travel in foreign countries immediately upon
their leaving school, and without sending them to any university.
Our young people, it is said, generally return home much improved
by their travels. A young man who goes abroad at seventeen or
eighteen, and returns home at one and twenty, returns three or
four years older than he was when he went abroad; and at that age
it is very difficult not to improve a good deal in three or four
years. In the course of his travels he generally acquires some
knowledge of one or two foreign languages; a knowledge, however,
which is seldom sufficient to enable him either to speak or write
them with propriety. In other respects he commonly returns home
more conceited, more unprincipled, more dissipated, and more
incapable of any serious application either to study or to
business than he could well have become in so short a time had he
lived at home. By travelling so very young, by spending in the
most frivolous dissipation the most precious years of his life,
at a distance from the inspection and control of his parents and
relations, every useful habit which the earlier parts of his
education might have had some tendency to form in him, instead of
being riveted and confirmed, is almost necessarily either
weakened or effaced. Nothing but the discredit into which the
universities are allowing themselves to fall could ever have
brought into repute so very absurd a practice as that of
travelling at this early period of life. By sending his son
abroad, a father delivers himself at least for some time, from so
disagreeable an object as that of a son unemployed, neglected,
and going to ruin before his eyes.
Such have been the effects of some of the modern
institutions for education.
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