Russell: Good form, urbanity and Formal Education
(Source: "The Basic Writings of Bertrand Russell", Section 10~~"The philosopher of Education", Essay no. 1~"Education")
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is not only in elementary education that these evils exist. In more advanced education they take subtler
forms, and there is more attempt to conceal
them, but they are still present. Eton and Oxford set a certain stamp upon a man’s mind, just as a Jesuit
College does. It can hardly be said that Eton
and Oxford have a conscious purpose, but they have a purpose which is none the less strong and effective
for not being formulated. In almost all who
have been through them they produce a worship of ‘good form’, which is as destructive to life and thought
as the medieval Church. ‘Good form’ is quite
compatible with a superficial
open-mindedness, a readiness to hear all
sides, and a certain urbanity towards opponents. But it is not compatible with fundamental open-mindedness, or with any inward
readiness to give weight
to the other side. Its essence is the assumption that what is
most important
is a certain kind of behaviour, a behaviour which minimizes friction between equals and delicately
impresses inferiors with a conviction of
their own crudity. As
a means of producing an agreeable social milieu for
those who have money with no strong beliefs
or unusual desires it has some merit. In every other respect it is abominable.
The
evils of ‘good form’ arise from two sources: its perfect assurance of its own rightness, and its belief that
correct manners are more to be desired than intellect,
or artistic creation, or vital energy, or any of the other sources of progress in the world. Perfect
assurance, by itself, is enough to destroy all mental progress in those who have it. And when it is combined with
contempt for
the angularities and awkwardnesses that are almost invariably associated with great mental power, it
becomes a source of destruction to all who
come in contact with it.
Education
ought to foster the wish for
truth, not the conviction that some particular creed is the truth. But it is creeds that hold
men together in fighting organizations: Churches, States, political parties. It
is intensity of belief in
a creed that produces
efficiency in fighting:
victory comes to those who feel the strongest certainty about matters on which doubt is the only rational
attitude. To produce
this intensity of belief and this efficiency
in fighting, the child’s nature is warped, and its free outlook
is cramped, by cultivating inhibitions as
a check to the growth of new ideas. In those whose minds are not very active the result is the omnipotence of
prejudice; while the few whose thought
cannot be wholly killed become cynical, intellectually hopeless, destructively critical, able to make
all that is living seem foolish, unable themselves
to supply the creative impulses which they destroy in others.
The
desirable kind of discipline is the kind that
comes from within, which consists in the power of pursuing a distant object steadily, forgoing and suffering
many things on the way. This involves the subordination of minor impulses
to will, the power of a directing action by
large creative desires even at moments when they are not vividly alive. Without this, no serious ambition, good
or bad, can be realized, no consistent purpose
can dominate. This kind of discipline is very necessary, but can only result from strong desires for
ends not immediately attainable, and can only
be produced by education if education fosters such desires, which it seldom does at present.
Although
elementary education encourages the undesirable discipline that consists in passive obedience, and
although hardly any existing education encourages
the moral discipline of consistent self-direction, there is a certain kind of purely mental discipline which
is produced by the traditional higher education.
The kind I mean is that which enables a man to concentrate his thoughts at will upon
any matter that he has occasion to consider, regardless of preoccupations or boredom or
intellectual difficulty. This quality, though it has no important intrinsic
excellence, greatly enhances the efficiency
of the mind as an instrument. It
is this that enables a lawyer to master the scientific details of a patent case which he
forgets as soon as judgment has been given, or
a civil servant to deal quickly with many different
administrative questions in
succession. It is this that enables men to forget private cares during business hours. In a complicated world it is a
very necessary faculty for those whose work
requires mental concentration.
Success
in producing mental discipline is the chief merit of traditional higher education. I
doubt whether it can be achieved except by compelling or persuading active attention to a
prescribed task. It is for this reason chiefly that
I do not believe methods such as Madame Montessori’s applicable when the age of childhood has
been passed. The essence of her method consists in giving a choice of occupations, any one
of which is interesting to most children,
and all of which are instructive. The child’s attention is wholly spontaneous, as in play; it enjoys
acquiring knowledge in this way, and does not
acquire any knowledge which it does not desire. I am convinced that this is the best method of education with
young children: the actual results make it
almost impossible to think
otherwise. But it is difficult to see how this method can lead to control of attention
by the will…..
Many
things which must be
thought about are uninteresting, and even those that are interesting at first often become very wearisome before they
have been considered as long as is necessary.
The power of giving prolonged attention is very important, and it is hardly to be widely acquired except
as a habit induced originally by outside.
And the discussion goes on. If you are
interested in reading the whole thing, the link is mentioned below:
https://emilkirkegaard.dk/en/wp-content/uploads/The-Basic-Writings-of-Bertrand-Russell.pdf
