Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editor's preface
- Editorial notes and references
- Introduction
- Notes on text and translation
- Chronology
- Bibliography
- PARERGA AND PARALIPOMENA, VOLUME 2
- Contents
- Sporadic yet systematically ordered thoughts on multifarious topics
- Chapter 1 On philosophy and its method
- Chapter 2 On logic and dialectic
- Chapter 3 Some thoughts concerning the intellect in general and in every respect
- Chapter 4 Some observations on the antithesis of the thing in itself and appearance
- Chapter 5 Some words on pantheism
- Chapter 6 On philosophy and natural science
- Chapter 7 On colour theory
- Chapter 8 On ethics
- Chapter 9 On jurisprudence and politics
- Chapter 10 On the doctrine of the indestructibility of our true essence by death
- Chapter 11 Additional remarks on the doctrine of the nothingness of existence
- Chapter 12 Additional remarks on the doctrine of the suffering of the world
- Chapter 13 On suicide
- Chapter 14 Additional remarks on the doctrine of the affirmation and negation of the will to life
- Chapter 15 On religion
- Chapter 16 Some remarks on Sanskrit literature
- Chapter 17 Some archaeological observations
- Chapter 18 Some mythological observations
- Chapter 19 On the metaphysics of the beautiful and aesthetics
- Chapter 20 On judgement, criticism, approbation and fame
- Chapter 21 On learning and the learned
- Chapter 22 Thinking for oneself
- Chapter 23 On writing and style
- Chapter 24 On reading and books
- Chapter 25 On language and words
- Chapter 26 Psychological remarks
- Chapter 27 On women
- Chapter 28 On education
- Chapter 29 On physiognomy
- Chapter 30 On noise and sounds
- Chapter 31 Similes, parables and fables
- Some verses
- Versions of Schopenhauer's text
- Glossary of names
- Index
Chapter 28 - On education
from PARERGA AND PARALIPOMENA, VOLUME 2
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editor's preface
- Editorial notes and references
- Introduction
- Notes on text and translation
- Chronology
- Bibliography
- PARERGA AND PARALIPOMENA, VOLUME 2
- Contents
- Sporadic yet systematically ordered thoughts on multifarious topics
- Chapter 1 On philosophy and its method
- Chapter 2 On logic and dialectic
- Chapter 3 Some thoughts concerning the intellect in general and in every respect
- Chapter 4 Some observations on the antithesis of the thing in itself and appearance
- Chapter 5 Some words on pantheism
- Chapter 6 On philosophy and natural science
- Chapter 7 On colour theory
- Chapter 8 On ethics
- Chapter 9 On jurisprudence and politics
- Chapter 10 On the doctrine of the indestructibility of our true essence by death
- Chapter 11 Additional remarks on the doctrine of the nothingness of existence
- Chapter 12 Additional remarks on the doctrine of the suffering of the world
- Chapter 13 On suicide
- Chapter 14 Additional remarks on the doctrine of the affirmation and negation of the will to life
- Chapter 15 On religion
- Chapter 16 Some remarks on Sanskrit literature
- Chapter 17 Some archaeological observations
- Chapter 18 Some mythological observations
- Chapter 19 On the metaphysics of the beautiful and aesthetics
- Chapter 20 On judgement, criticism, approbation and fame
- Chapter 21 On learning and the learned
- Chapter 22 Thinking for oneself
- Chapter 23 On writing and style
- Chapter 24 On reading and books
- Chapter 25 On language and words
- Chapter 26 Psychological remarks
- Chapter 27 On women
- Chapter 28 On education
- Chapter 29 On physiognomy
- Chapter 30 On noise and sounds
- Chapter 31 Similes, parables and fables
- Some verses
- Versions of Schopenhauer's text
- Glossary of names
- Index
Summary
§372
As a result of the nature of our intellect concepts should arise through abstraction from intuitions, thus the latter should exist earlier than the former. Now when this course is actually taken, as in the case of someone whose only teacher and textbook is experience, then a person knows quite well which are the intuitions that belong to each of his concepts and have those concepts as their representatives; he knows both of them exactly and accordingly deals correctly with everything that comes before him. We can call this path natural education.
Conversely in artificial education the mind is stuffed with concepts by means of telling, teaching and reading before an even remotely extended acquaintance with the intuitive world exists. Experience is now supposed to fill in the intuitions to all those concepts, but until such time they will be wrongly applied and accordingly things and people will be wrongly judged, wrongly seen and wrongly treated. So it happens that education makes for crooked minds, and this is why in our youth, after much learning and reading, we enter the world partly naïvely and partly eccentrically, and our behaviour in it is alternatingly anxious and rash, because our head is full of concepts that we are trying hard to apply but are almost always wrongly used. This is the result of that confusion of grounds and consequence through which, completely contrary to the natural developmental course of our mind, we first obtain concepts and last intuitions, since our instructors instead of developing a boy's independent capacity for knowing, judging and thinking, are merely concerned with stuffing his head full of the ready-made thoughts of others. Afterwards long experience has to correct all those judgements that arose through the wrong application of concepts. Seldom does this succeed entirely. This is why so few scholars have that healthy common sense which is so frequently found in the completely uneducated.
§373
Based on the foregoing the main point of education would be that an acquaintance with the world, whose obtaining we could describe as the goal of all education, should begin from the proper end. But as demonstrated above, this will be based mainly on how in every matter intuition precedes the concept, moreover the narrower concept precedes the broader, and thus the whole instruction takes places in the order in which the concepts of things presuppose one another.
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- Schopenhauer: Parerga and ParalipomenaShort Philosophical Essays, pp. 562 - 567Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015