... composition of a good schoolmaster. Among these common sense is the first. This is a qualification exceedingly important, as in teaching school one has constant occasion for its exercise. Many, by no means deficient in intellect, are not persons of... American Annals of Education - עמוד 178נערך על ידי - 1837תצוגה מלאה - מידע על ספר זה
| Samuel Read Hall - 1829 - 160 דפים
...Many, by no means deficient in intellect, are not persons of common sense. I mean by the term, that faculty by which things are seen as they are. It implies...exercise of reason, uninfluenced by passion or prejudice. It is in man nearly what instinct is in brutes. It is very different from genius or talent, as they... | |
| Samuel Read Hall - 1830 - 160 דפים
...Many, by no means deficient in intellect, are not persons of common sense. I mean by the term, that faculty by which things are seen as they are. It implies...proper sense of propriety in regard to the common aft'airs of life. It leads us to form judicious plans of action, and to be governed by our circumstances,... | |
| Samuel Read Hall - 1833 - 180 דפים
...Many, by no means deficient in intellect, are not persons of common sense. I mean by the term, that faculty by which things are seen as they are. It implies...judicious plans of action, and to be governed by our circumtances, in the way which men in general will approve. It is the exercise of reason, uninfluenced... | |
| Samuel Read Hall - 1833 - 180 דפים
...by no means deficient in intellect, are not persons dt" common sense. I mean_,b,y the.terjtn, that faculty by which things are seen as they are. It implies...discrimination, and a proper sense of propriety in regard to die common affairs of life. It leads us to form judicious plans of action, and to be governed by our... | |
| William Andrus Alcott - 1834 - 344 דפים
...important is common sense. I mean by the term that faculty by which things are seen as they are. 21* It implies judgment and discrimination, and a proper sense of propriety in regard to the common concerns of life. It leads us to form judicious plans of action, and to be governed by our circumstances... | |
| 1837 - 600 דפים
...language of Mr Hall, author of the LecWires on School Keeping, ' the faculty by which things are seerl as they are. It implies judgment and discrimination,...proper sense of propriety in regard to the common of life. It leads us to form judicinus plans of action ; to be governed by our circumstances, in such... | |
| Cortlandt Van Rensselaer - 1850 - 814 דפים
...Many, by no means deficient in intellect, are not persons of common sense. I mean by the term, that faculty by which things are seen as they are. It implies...exercise of reason, uninfluenced by passion or prejudice. It is in man nearly what instinct is in brutes. It is very different from genius or talent, as they... | |
| John Mather Austin - 1859 - 268 דפים
...place, I mean the faculty by means of which we see things as they really are. It implies judg ment and discrimination, and a proper sense of propriety in regard to the common concerns of life. It leads us to form judicious plans of action, and to be governed by our circumstances... | |
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