222 INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EDUCATION.
school in which these two subjects, algebra and geometry, are to be taught. If the aim
of the school is to prepare for the college, then it seems to me that the college may, to
2 large extent, assume the responsibility of securing the organic union between these
two subjects with the student, and of giving him full and practical control for life
conduct of both these subjects. But if the aim of the secondary school, as is usually
the case in our public high-schools, is to use the studies of algebra and geometry for what
they are worth in securing a rounded education ; and when the secondary school does
itself assume the responsibility, as it does in these high-schools, of dismissing the
student with this organic union among the subjects well established, and with fairly
good control of the connections with the subjects of general life conduct, then the ques-
tion becomes a different one. 1 have placed myself rather upon the latter of these
standpoints; and it has seemed to me of greater importance that we should examine
this question with reference to the aim which affects the public at large. I think it is
time that in this subject, as well as in regard to many others, the secondary public
schools should abandon the practice of giving subjects in isolation to children, simply
for their own sake. They should strive to give more of its subjects in organic connec-
sion, one having necessarily a bearing upon the other.
Now I would say the elementary school has to furnish, first of all, the conditions of
apperceptional development at the hands of well-regulated experience. In the second
place, it must enable the child to make orderly arrangement of all this experience in an
approximately conventional and approximately scientific grouping. His mind must
be set in the direction of order. The business of the secondary school, I should say, is
to give him the experiences and sciences of the race ; to place him squarely and firmly,
conscientiously and intelligently upon the basis of the past, and upon the basis of
achievements already attained. Giving to the pupil that which the race possessed in
conventional, scientific attainment, and with reference to life conduct, seems to me has
to be the predominant task, almost specific task, of the secondary public high-school.
The tertiary phase of education should then afford to the student an opportunity, on
‘he basis of this historic and scientific grasp of knowledge, for independent research.
With such a scheme of education no phase of it would be fragmentary. Wherever
he scholar leaves the school, and leaves the scheme, he leaves it well rounded with
seference to his stage of development. Does he leave the school at the elementary
stage, he goes out with his mind and his habits clearly set toward an appreciation and
ove of the historical stage. Does he leave it at the historical stage, he leaves with his
mind fully set toward the point of independent research, and in such a way that he
can be helped to self-culture. -Yet, again, if he leaves the elementary school, and has
no opportunity to do schoolwork in the secondary school, the attitude of his mind is in
that direction, and he will seek of his own accord to supply that which he has not
obtained.
What interests us to-day is to find what would be the natural place of algebra and
geometry in such a scheme. The highest phases of life conduct are certainly self-
expression, self-expression in benevolence, I say everything that is done must grow
out of self-expression in benevolence. That which stimulates self-expression in the
historic law of the race comes from literature and art, in its highest sense—technical
arts as well as representative arts. History is an account of the development of the
feelings of kinship among races.
The knowledge of physics and chemistry is a closed book until it is opened by mathe-
matical studies: until we can view it in the light of mathematics, of quantity and
number. The study of numbers is the route, and it furnishes the key for all else. The
study of geometry and the study of form will become clear to us only in the study
»f the rules of quantity. Of course algebra is a high development of the quantitative
mathematics. Algebra is not a study of principles. It is a study of the laws and the
anetions of the laws. It is through algebra, or through the study of the functions of
number, that we are enabled to appreciate the marvels of mathematics. And these facts
can be appreciated only at the hand of algebraic equation. Kvery form, every line,
avery surface has its equation, and quantity reveals it. It is through equation that we
coms to the soul of the form. If we have superficial geometry, which fills that external
-elation and only the external phases, then possibly we might not need this algebraic
form. But to get at the soul of it, and that which can never be changed by any con-
sideration whatever, it must bereached through algebraic formula. In every stage, form
study must rest upon quantity study ; and, in a general way, geometry must work up
on some corresponding phase of algebra, using this term in its very highest sense.
We sometimes see the mechanical way of drawing a circle by making a six-sided
form, and then an octagon, and a thirty-two-sided form ; and then we have some
resemblance to a circle : but the life of a circle is not there. The circle grows out from
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