Annual Meeting: Proceedings, Constitution, List of Active Members, and Addresses |
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Page xix
... designed to be a practical one , and I shall there- fore endeavor to speak plainly what I conceive to be the truth , and to call things by their right names . I hope none will feel annoyed if I do so , speaking what I think the truth ...
... designed to be a practical one , and I shall there- fore endeavor to speak plainly what I conceive to be the truth , and to call things by their right names . I hope none will feel annoyed if I do so , speaking what I think the truth ...
Page 2
... designed each species of crea- ture to be , that it must grow to be , each one " after his kind , " - full - orbed and fruitful , if wisely and naturally reared ; dwarfed , distorted , and unpro- ductive if violent or rude hands attempt ...
... designed each species of crea- ture to be , that it must grow to be , each one " after his kind , " - full - orbed and fruitful , if wisely and naturally reared ; dwarfed , distorted , and unpro- ductive if violent or rude hands attempt ...
Page 7
... to comprehend and use it . The second contem- plates him as a member of society and gifted with powers fitting him to live in the world of men . The third recognizes him as having native powers designed to THE PROBLEM OF EDUCATION . 7.
... to comprehend and use it . The second contem- plates him as a member of society and gifted with powers fitting him to live in the world of men . The third recognizes him as having native powers designed to THE PROBLEM OF EDUCATION . 7.
Page 8
... designed to make him a worshipper of God and an heir of heaven . Educated under the first statement , man would be but a splendid savage , a glorious child of Nature , wise in Nature's learning , stalwart in natural strength , but ...
... designed to make him a worshipper of God and an heir of heaven . Educated under the first statement , man would be but a splendid savage , a glorious child of Nature , wise in Nature's learning , stalwart in natural strength , but ...
Page 17
... designed him to be , that from the acorn can come only the oak . I have claimed , also , that the whole of this preappointed destiny and duty of man is com- — prehended in the three great fields of fact and relation 2 * THE PROBLEM OF ...
... designed him to be , that from the acorn can come only the oak . I have claimed , also , that the whole of this preappointed destiny and duty of man is com- — prehended in the three great fields of fact and relation 2 * THE PROBLEM OF ...
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Popular passages
Page 108 - But for those first affections, Those shadowy recollections, Which, be they what they may, Are yet the fountain light of all our day, Are yet a master light of all our seeing; Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make Our noisy years seem moments in the being Of the eternal Silence...
Page lxv - THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, That our thanks are due and are hereby tendered to the...
Page 175 - Systematic Education ; or Elementary Instruction in the various Departments of Literature and Science, with Practical Rules for studying each branch of Useful Knowledge.
Page 126 - Constitution, may be adopted at any regular meeting. 2. This Constitution may be altered or amended, by a vote of two...
Page 9 - Go ye into all the world and teach all nations." To those who were inclined to make religion complex and mysterious, magical and formal, He said, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy might, with all thy mind, and with all thy heart; and thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." And yet again, to those who either then or thereafter were to make an ecclesiastical system the basis of personal power and worldly splendor, and who were to surround the church with the pomp and circumstance of...
Page 126 - By-Laws for its government. 6. It shall be the particular duty of the Curators to select books, and to take charge of the library of the Institute. 7. The Censors shall have authority to procure for publication the annual address and lectures. It shall be their duty to examine the annual reports of the Standing Committees, and all other communications made to the Society ; and to publish such of them, as, in their estimation, may tend to throw light on the subject of Education, and aid the faithful...
Page 12 - Human societies are born, live, and die, upon the earth; there they accomplish their destinies. But they contain not the whole man. After his engagement to society there still remains in him the more noble part of his nature; those high faculties by which he elevates himself to God, to a future life, and to the unknown blessings of an invisible world. We, individuals, each with a separate and distinct existence, with an identical person, we, truly beings endowed with immortality, we have a higher...
Page li - ... the military and naval schools established to impart this knowledge and training will fail in their objects, unless young men are selected as students, of the right age, with suitable preparatory knowledge, with vigor of body, and aptitude of mind, for the special studies of such schools; and...
Page 154 - A system of geography, popular and scientific; or, A physical, political, and statistical account of the world and its various divisions.
Page 127 - Trustees may elect an auditor, to hold office during the pleasure of the Board, whose duty it shall be to audit the accounts of the Treasurer, and who shall report thereon from time to time as the Treasurer may require or as the Executive Committee may direct. The compensation to be paid such auditor shall be fixed by the Executive Committee subject to the approval of the Board of Trustees. SEC. V. The Director shall present a report of the work...