DISCUSSION. 137
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Jducation so much criticised as the German gymnasium. In this country it has been
rue that the great majority of scientific men were outside of the colleges altogether.
[t is not true now, by any means, but it was once true, that the men who had done
work and made a name for American science were men outside of colleges, who reached
their knowledge through other means, because they were strained out of colleges which
‘orced them to do what they did not want to do.
[Here Professor Shorey, of the University of Chicago, asked whether President Jordan
sould name some of the American men of science who had received their training out-
side of the colleges. |
President Jordan said that he could mention in general almost all those who are
great in zodlogy, such as Audubon, Wilson, and Lawrence. He could think of only two
sarly scientific men who were college graduates. However, all that class of men was
outside of colleges ; not that a classical education would have hurt them, but that a
slassical education stood between them and what they wanted to do.
Most of the scientific men whose letters were read by Professor Hale appealed to the
value of Greek from the utilitarian side, referring to its etymological advantages. But
we know that the knowledge of Greek for etymological purposes is not the kind usually
taught in college, nor is the value of Greek to scientific men in giving them the meaning
of scientific words of very great importance. In another letter read there was a refer-
ance to the fact that the intellectual tilths of this generation were largely on classical
delds. As a matter of fact, they were largely in biological and psychological fields,
matters wholly outside of the classics. The intellectual tilths of this generation have
been about the works and name of Darwin. They have dominated everything else, and
if we are to apply the weight of evidence as to the value of Greek and Latin, we might
appeal to Darwin, who says his time in the university was absolutelv wasted, because it
was spent on subjects he had no use for.
But unfriendly criticism of Greck, as Greek, is not legitimate, because Greek and what
Greek stands for will always have its importance. The question here is simply whether
we will take the name B.A. for a narrow field, or spread it over a wider one. In the
statement made in one of the letters, that modern languages are mere gruel beside Latin
and Greek, the person simply gives himself away. A man who has read Goethe, Lessing,
and other masters would never say that. Nothing is gruel if it is done in a worthy
spirit. Advanced work in any subject will lead to strength. There is no conceivable
subject in which it will not. In closing, President Jordan asked when Greek became a
dead language and ceased to be a means of human intercourse. He had supposed that
quite a number of persons, who said they were Greeks and came from Greece, were still
actually using Greek as a means of human intercourse. Greek is not a dead language,
and even if it was it would not deserve any special consideration on account of its death.
Dr. IMELMANN, of the Joachimsthal Gymnasium, Berlin, Germany, in reply to Presi-
Jent Jordan said that the Greek question, which in America and England is in the first
olace a university question, is in Germany primarily a college or gymnasial question.
As an old gymnasial teacher, he took the highest interest in this question and had studied
the literature on the subject—an immense literature, indeed—with an unprejudiced
mind. He was under the impression that the general bearings of the question in Amer-
ica and in Germany were quite analogous, and that the arguments pro and con were the
same. The problem itself appears to be an endless problem. This Greek question will
never be solved. Still, to occupy one’s self with it, to study the question of Greek, is in
itself of the highest value. Even those who oppose the classical system, whenever they
study this question are studying Greek, too. It is, after all, more a question of personal
axperience, and, so to say, of personal faith,—for a scientific final determination of this
sroblem is not possible. Those who have once lived, and, more so, those who are so