The present interest of Englishmen in education is partly due to
the fact that they are impressed
by German thoroughness. Now let there be no mistake. The war has shown
the effectiveness of
German education in certain departments of life, but it has shown not
only its ineffectiveness, but
its grotesque absurdity in regard to other departments of life, and
those the departments which
are, even in a political sense, the most important. In the organization
of material resources
Germany has won well-merited admiration, but in regard to moral
conduct, and in regard to all
that art of dealing with other men and other nations which is
closely allied to moral conduct, she
has won for herself the horror of the civilized world. If you
take the whole result, and ask whether
we prefer German or English education, I at any rate should not
hesitate in my reply.
Thus William Temple, future archbishop, addressing the Educational
Section at the 1916
meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in
Newcastle. Temple's
statement introduced his contribution to the ‘neglect-of-science’
debate, a public dispute
over the place of science in English secondary education.
Originally, the debate had been
started by prominent scientists convinced that England's
military and industrial fortunes
were suffering as a result of the country's continuing
scientific illiteracy. The contrasts
Temple drew between ‘us’ and ‘them’,
between England and Germany, between ‘conduct’
and ‘efficiency’, cropped up throughout the debate.