BRARYOF CONGRESS, Chapo Copyright No Slielf__llL^_. • UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. THE SOCIAL MIND AND EDUCATION BY GEORGE EDGAR VINCENT Assistant Professor of Sociology in The University of Chicago THE MACMILLAN COMPANY LONDON : MACMILLAN & CO., Ltd. 1897 *"0??^«0f All rights reserved Copyright, 1897 By The Macmillan Company CONTENTS. Chapter Page Introduction • v I. The Social Mind and Its Development ii II. Social Philosophy as a ''Scientia Scien- tiarum" 39 III. The Development of Social and of In- dividual Thought 66 IV. The Social Mind and Education .... 91 V. The Integration of Studies . , 114 VI. A Tentative Curriculum • . 136 Bibliography 147 Index 153 INTRODUCTION. The task which this essay undertakes is one of organi- zation, rather than of investigation, the putting together in relations of interdependence, or mutual reinforcement, of ideas which have been worked out in connection with sev- eral more or less isolated pursuits. In terms of a proposition to be presented in Chapter I. , the attempt belongs to that synthetic movement which is one of the factors in the progress of both the social and the individual mind. An effort is made to bring con- ceptions from social philosophy to bear upon the problem of education, with the hope that there may result both clar- ification of ideas and greater definiteness of purpose. The thought of social philosophy which sees in the development of society the growth of a vast psychic or- ganism, to which individuals are intrinsically related, in which alone they find self-realization, is of the highest significance for the teacher, to whom it suggests both aim and method. While this undertaking is, in general, synthetic, its scope is so vast that emphasis will be laid chiefly, if not exclusively, upon the cognitive function of society and of the individual. Such one-sidedness of treatment is adopted deliberately, and not from any failure to recognize the organic unity of the mind. A complete view of the subject would include all the intimately interdependent aspects of both social and individual consciousness. Again, the view is confined to social life, as the sphere of man's activity, and as affording the immediate material of his vi Introduction. science and philosophy. The widest treatment would comprehend a cosmic philosophy ; but for obvious reasons it is necessary to limit an inquiry already covering an immense field. This primary synthesis must itself be further combined in the broader conception of the uni- verse. The argument of this essay, in its main outlines, is as follows : In the process of social evolution men's ideas, judg- ments, and desires have been combined into products which, transmitted from generation to generation, react upon individuals, and are in turn modified by them. These * ' capitalizations of experience ' ' and their unceasing reactions form what may be described as the social mind. ' The social tradition, in the course of its development, has been enriched by the successive separation or analysis of the world of phenomena and the generalization and re- combination of them in explanations or theories. Gradu- ally out of empiricism and "common sense" have been evolved more and more methodic examination and purpose- ful explanation, /. ^. , science and philosophy. Although differing chiefly in range and exactness of explanation, science and philosophy are therefore in a broad sense com- plementary processes of the social mind, which seeks not only knowledge of details, but a conception of the whole. Philosophy, in one of its functions at least, is a " science of the sciences." The race, confronted from the beginning by a complex of physical, vital, mental, and social phenomena, has analyzed and combined these facts, has slowly formed nuclei of phenomena related by obvious causes, and, struggling always for unity, has filled up the gaps between 1 For purposes of brief exposition here this concept is personified in a manner which might be misleading, but for the fuller explanation of the term to be given in Chapter I. Introduction. vii such groups by explanations, more or less anthropomor- phic. In the lapse of time these gaps have grown smaller and smaller, until with the marvelous growth of the nature groups, which in many cases have quite touched borders, the explanations have become more and more definitely and immediately causal. A group of social theories has always been present in the collective tradition, but in comparative isolation and vague consciousness. The modern tendency has brought this group into close rela- tion with the others, which are now seen to be subordinate to it. So that the science of society (in a broad sense, not Sociology as a special discipline) is being recognized as the scientia scientiarum, a true philosophy. Modern social philosophy is the latest conscious synthesis of the social mind. The sciences, or groups of knowledge, which have been reflectively organized out of the experiences of the race, are all related to social life, which is their point of de- parture and the common centre to which they return. Social philosophy comprehends society by organizing into a unity these elements of analysis. The parallel between the development of the individual and that of the race, asserted by poets, scientists, and philosophers, has of late been subjected to criticism. It has been pointed out that there are ''short-cuts" by which in individual evolution whole stages of the race's growth may be omitted. Educationally, the theory of parallel development is fruitful in suggestions, but it may easily be made the basis of artificial schemes, such as certain doctrinaire forms of the ' ' Culture Epoch theory, ' ' which assume that the products of different stages of social development, rather than life itself, must appeal to the child at corresponding periods of his development. viii Introduction, The real parallel is in the process, the progress from analysis to synthesis, and in the gradual development of fully self-conscious effort out of vaguely conscious activity. Education sets before itself the task of relating the indi- vidual intrinsically to the social tradition so that he may become an organic part of society. It aims to effect * * short-cuts ' ' in the evolution of the individual mind, but it must not violate the general laws of that development. All current plans for the concentration, correlation, or coordination of studies deal with the early or unconscious period of growth, during which it is quite as important to direct and systematize the process of analysis, i. e. , to aid the pupil in taking apart the vague unity of his life ex- periences, as to maintain relations between these parts or studies. The problems of the earlier stages in education are being attacked vigorously, but the analogy of race de- velopment suggests also the necessity of a conscious syn- thesis in the higher education. The stress there is now laid upon analysis, upon the study of subjects, and separate disciplines, while the complementary process of combina- tion, or integration, is, for the most part, left to chance, to the gradual and comparatively planless effort of the maturing individual to arrange his scattered knowledge into a coherent theory of the phenomena which his daily life presents. It should be, therefore, a definite aim of the higher education to direct the student in a purposeful integration of his various pursuits, a putting back of these abstractions into a concrete conception of life. No study, in itself, can be a core for such integration. Social life and the student in relation to it form the real centre. The various social sciences, conceived broadly, may be made to serve the purpose ; literature, regarded as a social product, may render important aid. But in so far Introduction. ix as these instruments are useful they are really approxima- tions to a social philosophy, which aims to recombine into a more significant organic unity all the kinds of knowl- edge which have been analyzed and abstracted out of the life of men. Obviously, such a preliminary philosophy will not form a stable equilibrium in the student's mind. His in- creasingly complex experiences, varying interests, and maturing observation will compel continued analysis and synthesis. But this consciously directed integration will effect a *' short-cut" in his mental development, and will help to secure, with economy of effort, his incorporation with the social mind. It will all the more quickly fit him for his social activities and will the sooner enable him to contribute something to the progressive organization of the social tradition. THE SOCIAL MIND AND EDUCATION. CHAPTER I. THE SOCIAL MIND AND ITS DEVELOPMENT. The modern conception of the social or general mind is the result of a conscious effort to discriminate and explain the phenomena which have their origin in the influence of individual minds upon each other in society, and the action and reaction between individuals and the accumu- lated psychical resources which are transmitted from gen- eration to generation. The unconscious or empirical recognition of these phenomena has long found expression in such phrases as ''public opinion," "popular will," ''the spirit of the people," the "Zeitgeist," the "^me des peuples, ' ' and is vaguely implied in the adjective ' ' unan- imous." It is to be expected that thus early in the attempt to mark off and organize the phenomena of social psychology there should be decided differences of opinion both as to their nature and as to the concepts by which they may be most satisfactorily expounded. Without attempting to discuss or reconcile these conflicting views, we shall try to describe the generally established facts of the social mind. At the outset we must guard against the dangers which lurk in the use of analogies. There can be no facts of collective consciousness outside of and apart from individ- ual consciousness. James has insisted upon this in his delightfully concrete way: "Take a dozen words," he says, "and take twelve men and tell to each one word. 12 The Social Mind and Education. Then stand the men in a row or jam them in a bunch, and let each think of his word as intently as he will ; nowhere will there be a consciousness of the whole sentence. The private minds do not agglomerate into a higher com- pound mind."^ If, however, each of these men com- municate his word to the others, and by dint of mutual suggestion the sentence be united in the consciousness of each, the group may be regarded as of one mind, and the sentence, a result of cooperation, is a social product. If it be symbolized in written language, it takes on no new or really objective nature but is simply a potentiality, and has no actual existence as thought until it gets itself translated again into individual consciousness.^ From the earliest beginnings of society men have been cooperating by conflict, discussion, the exercise of author- ity, and the imitation of leaders, to produce social ideas, i. e., states of consciousness common to whole groups.* These products, symbolized in speech or written language'' and embodied in ceremonials, customs, and laws, have been transmitted from age to age, undergoing constant modification and reorganization.^ Simple and obvious as the above statement seems there is a fallacy in its very simplicity. There is a mechanical 1 James: Psychology, Vol. I., p. i6o. FouillSe, in attacking the mystical conceptions of the German Folk-psycholo- gists, is strenuous upon this poitit : " Ce qu'on appelle la conscience nationale est le r^sultat et la consonance des millions de pens^es individuelles." He denies emphatically that there is " fusion de toutes les consciences individuelles en une seule." — La science sociale contemporaine, pp. 192-193. 2 F. H. Giddings : Principles of Sociology, p. 146. 3 "Un chaos d'id€es et d'interets en lutte entre individus distincts et rapprochds ; voila le premier groupe social ; et il s'agit avec cela de former le faisceau le plus fort et le plus volumineux de croyances qui se confirment ou ne se contredisent pas, de dgsirs qui s'entraident ou ne se contrarient pas."— G. Tarde : La logique sociale, p. 96. •4 A. E. Fr. Schaffle: Bau und Leben des socialen Korpers, I. Auf., Bd. I., S. 94. 5 W. H. Payne describes the experiences of the race as " capitalized and trans- mitted " from generation to generation. Educational Review, Vol. X,, p. 137. The Social Mind and Its Development. 13 or chemical analogy in the conception of ideas being com- bined into products, which is likely to mislead unless its use be carefully guarded. Every modification of social thought must be effected in the mind of some one man, must result from a unified state of individual conscious- ness/ Otherwise a social "mind-stuff" theory^ or an Herbartian metaphysic would be needed to explain the phenomenon. It is only when looked at in a general way and over considerable periods that this movement of the social mind seems to assume an independent and some- what super-psychical character. There is a distinct ad- vantage in taking this social and objective point of view, if only the really individual nature of the elaboration be kept in thought. The stream of social consciousness has no other channels through which to flow than those of indi- vidual minds. It may be frozen into symbolic forms, but melts into mobility again only in the consciousness of man. Yet it would be a serious mistake to reduce the phe- nomena of the social mind to those of individual psy- chology merely. "The spirit of the people [declares Falckenberg] is not a phrase, an empty name, but a real force, not a sum of the individ- uals belonging to the people, but an encompassing and controlling power which brings forth in the whole body processes (^. g.^ language) which could not occur in individuals as such. It is only as a member of society that any one becomes truly man. The community is the subject of the higher life of spirit." ^ There is an idealism about such a paragraph which is suggestive but at the same time somewhat vague. Lewes speaks more definitely : "A solitary man would think and feel and will ; but he would no more fashion his feelings, 1 Lewes has pointed this out in these words : " Nor can experience be likened to any complex of parts ; it is no mosaic of elements ; it is a living, developing, manifold unity." — Problems of Life and Mind ; The Study of Psychology, p. i8o. 2 James : loc. cit., Vol. I., pp. 158-162. 3 History of Modern Philosophy (tr. by Armstrong), p. 623. 14 The Social Mind and Education. thoughts, and volitions into conceptions which are the formulae of knowledge than he would articulate them in words. "^ Even the forms of thought, elaborated through a long period of social development, are transferred^ to the individual. The contents of his mind are in large measure social products. Through symbols of many- kinds the thoughts of others past and present reproduce themselves in his consciousness. Durkheim sees in the reaction of social products upon the individual a veritable compulsion, the domination of an independent entity over subjects powerless to resist.^ This is an extreme statement of the relation, yet it con- tains much truth. The conceptions which have been formulated during the development of society become "necessities of thought" to the individual.* The accu- mulated and organized observations and explanations of the race are communicated to him and either constitute his own view of reality or form a basis for further advance and modification. ^ 1 Loc. cit. , p. i6i . 2 This does not imply a mechanical superposition ab extra, but a hastening and guiding of individual development through education. 3 " Non seulement ces types de conduite ou de pens6e sont ext€rieurs a I'indi- vidu, mais ils sont doues d'une puissance imperative et coercitive en vertu de laquelle ils s'imposent k lui, qu'il le veuille ou non." — E. Durkheim: Les regies de la methode sociologique, p. 6. 4 Lewes, loc. cit., p. 169. In connection with this thought attention should be called to Tarde's ingenious theory of social categories. Just as certain forms of thought are necessary to classify, organize, and unify perceptions in individual consciousness, so society can be formed only by the aid of similar collective reconciling agencies or categories. " II y a done, en tout, pour I'esprit individuel, les categories sui- vantes, logiques et tel6ologiques : la Matiere-Force, I'Espace-Temps, le Plaisir et la Douleur : et pour I'esprit social ; la Divinity, la Langue, le Bien et le Mai." — La logique sociale, p. 92. 5 The formation and reaction of the general mind have been admirably de- scribed by Lewes : " Further, the experiences of each individual come and go. They correct, enlarge, destroy one another, leaving behind them a certain residual store which, condensed in intuitions and formulated in principles, direct The Social Mind and Its Development. 15 The social mind may be regarded either as in process of change or as in temporary equilibrium, as being formed or as a product. Such a discrimination is of course purely arbitrary. Yet it is a useful devise for examination and study. At any given moment the traditions of a society, economic, legal, religious, scientific, artistic, and political, may be thought of as social products forming in the aggregate the ' ' social memory. ' ' * Yet these products vary greatly in definiteness and coherence. A part are organized and unified but a large proportion are either discrete and isolated or in actual antagonism. As to form, they are for the most part symbolized in written or printed language, in works of art, in technical appliances, yet, as has been shown, they really exist only in individual minds. Every scientific book is, on the one hand, the product of cooperation by many individuals, but, on the other, it represents in its final form the unified consciousness of one man which may be reproduced in the minds of many others for whom the symbols have a definite meaning. ^ Again, the classes of products are not common to the whole society but are apportioned among many groups, or and modify all future experiences. The sum of these is designated as the individual mind. A similar process evolves the general mind — the residual store of experiences, common to all. By means of language, the individual shares in the general fund which thus becomes for him an impersonal ob- jective influence. To each it appeals. We all assimilate some of its material and help to increase its store. Not only do we find ourselves confronting nature to whose order we must conform, but confronting society whose law we must obey." — Problems of Life and Mind, p. i6i. 1 G. De Greef : Le transformisme social, p. 9. " Limitation se trouve ainsi correspondre exactement & la m€moire ; elle est en efFet la memoire sociale, aussi essentielle k tous les actes, aussi n^cessaire k tons les instants de la vie de soci^te, que la memoire est constamment et essentiellement en fonction dans le cerveau." — Tarde : loc. cit., p. 123. Tarde greatly extends the term " imitation." Traditions that are widely accepted are " imitated." Means of communication are *' facilites d'imitation," 2 A compilation or "undigested" mass of many individual ideas is a purely mechanical social product without real unity, which is secured only by the fusion of the materials in one mind. 1 6 The Social Mind and Education. at most these traditions are present in different minds in widely varying degrees of definiteness and clearness. The legal tradition enters the minds of the vast majority of citizens in a vague way at best. It is clearly conscious in the thought of a special class only, which, however, may be regarded as the social organ of that particular function of the collective mind.^ In a like manner all the tra- ditions of society are not merely symbolized but are in actual existence, forming in large measure the memories of individuals. Thus at any time they may be called into active consciousness to assimilate the new elements which are constantly received by the general mind.^ A dis- covery need not remain an isolated phenomenon until libraries have been ransacked to consult the social memory. The sifted experiences and conclusions of the race are active in the consciousness of many individuals who quickly combine in the unity of their own thoughts the new with the old and thus enrich the tradition and modify the collective memory. Insensibly our thought has been carried over from the static to the dynamic point of view. The very difficulty of isolating the forms of treatment is significant of the reality. As human consciousness is a ceaselessly changing stream^ so the social mind undergoes constant modifica- tion. Individual thoughts and feelings are, on the one hand, largely social products, yet, on the other, they offer new elements which are gathered up and integrated with the various traditions of the social mind. This process may be temporary, as in the case of mobs 1 De Greef : loc. cit., p. 5. L, F. Ward : The Psychic Factors of Civilization, pp. 297-298. 2 " Each novel impression has to be assimilated by the existing mass of residual impressions ; each new conclusion has to be affiliated on the old, dove- tailed into the rest." — Lewes : loc. cit., p. 166. 8 James: loc. cit., Vol. I., pp. 237-239, The Social Mind and Its Development. 17 or crowds/ or it may take on a more orderly, definite, and permanent character. Since this essay is to deal chiefly with the cognitive function of both the individual and the social mind, attention will be directed to those phenomena which display more or less systematic proc- esses of organization.^ The social mind, made possible by devices for the symbolizing and communicating of thought, attains coordi- nation and power in direct proportion to the organiza- tion of this mechanism. That society in which individuals are careful observers, accurate reporters, and in which the means exist for gathering up these observations, organizing them with the traditions of the past, and distributing the results widely, will, other things being equal, develop its collective knowledge to a high degree of efficiency. This is in general the process which is going on constantly in society. The absolutely essential importance of organized communication is obvious. Division of intellectual labor is as dependent upon communication as the specialization of industry upon a system of transportation. ^ A broad assertion like the above may mislead by its systematic form. Falckenberg has wisely observed : " . . If we may judge from the experience of the past, too much caution cannot be exercised in setting up formal laws for the development of thought."" Equal care should be observed in making general and simplified statements about complex phenomena. The social mind is not modi- 1 Le Bon : Psychologie desfoules, pp. 12-16. 2 It is very important to realize how greatly this restriction of the discussion narrows the field of inquiry. Social standards of taste and conduct, the phe- nomena of imitation and authority, the question of the collective will, etc., must be almost wholly neglected. 3 The invention of printing was, in this view, the setting up of a communicating apparatus by means of which the area of social consciousness might be greatly increased and made the basis for the later emergence of social self-consciousness. 4 Falckenberg : loc. cit.. p. 6. 1 8 The Social Mind and Education. fied in so methodic, orderly, and mechanical a manner as this description would seem to imply. The process is one of gradual growth. Conflicting feelings and theories coexist and struggle for mastery. The integration is never complete. To quote once more from Lewes : * * In the great total of collective experience, as in that of the individual, absurd perversions and wild fancies take their place beside exact correspondences of feeling and fact, and truths that are unshakable ; it is a shifting mass of truth and error forever becoming more and more sifted and organized into permanent structures of germinating fertility or of fossilized barrenness."^ Yet beneath these surface phenomena of conflict and confusion, it is possible to discover broad general tendencies of a more orderly nature. We have already seen that the social tradition is not transmitted in a single, compact, coherent body, but divides rather into a large number of minor traditions, each of which finds clear expression in the consciousness of a more or less restricted group of men. This is not to say that much of the tradition does not in a vague way enter the minds of large numbers in society, or to deny that in rare cases the whole stream of social consciousness, in a generalized form of course, may flow through single minds. This splitting up of the social memory suggests the ques- tion as to how far and in what sense society may attain self-consciousness. If the accumulations of experience are divided among social groups, must not consciousness and self -consciousness, which depend upon memory, be equally fragmentary ? A distinction must be made at the outset between in- dividual and social consciousness. Each member of society may be conscious of his own thoughts and feelings, but it is only when these thoughts and feelings are common 1 Loc. cit., p. i66. The Social Mind and Its Development. 19 to a whole group that social consciousness appears. Social consciousness is directly dependent upon the communi- cating structure and upon the intrinsic nature of the thought to be communicated, i. e., a fact will penetrate the social consciousness with a promptness proportioned to the facilities for transmission and to a degree dependent upon the generality of the interest to which it appeals.' Again, society may be described as self-conscious when, in addition to a community of thought and feeling, each individual realizes the significance of his own ideas and acts in relation to the aggregate of activities, and shapes his conduct in conformity with such knowledge or adopts general principles of procedure determined by collective de- liberation.^ Social self-consciousness thus develops out of 1 De Greef has worked out an elaborate analogy between the facts of indi- vidual and collective consciousness. He attempts to show a parallel between the progressive organization of the physical nervous system and the social organs of psychical communication and regulation. — Introduction a la sociologie (zme Partie), Chap. XIII. 2 Giddings thus characterizes social self-consciousness : " In a true social self- consciousness, which must be described rather than defined, the distinctive peculiarity is, that each individual makes his neighbor's feeling or judgment an object of thought, at the same instant that he makes his own feeling or thought such an object ; that he judges the two to be identical, and then he acts with a full consciousness that his fellows have come to like conclusions, and will act in like ^2cysy— Principles of Sociology, p. 137, This statement alone, perhaps from the nature of the phenomenon described, is somewhat disappointing in its vagueness. In order to genuine social self-consciousness there should be a knowledge in each individual mind of the aggregate or totality of individual activities in their relations, that which Giddings later describes as " a social perception." Through- out this discussion the term self-consciousness is used in general to connote definiteness of purpose, e.g., society acts in a self-conscious way when individuals conduct themselves in harmony with some common plan of procedure which has a fixed end in view. Cf. L. F. Ward : Dynamic Sociology, Vol. II,, pp. 249, 250, and Fouillee : loc. cit., pp. 235-246. Tarde has admirably described the formation of social consciousness from the products of individual consciousness: "Tout, dans la creation d'une oeuvre sociale quelconque, simple ou compos6e, n'est qu'acte de conscience, et, le plus souvent m^me, de reflexion et d'effort; mais, ^ I'origine, une invention [idea, theory, piece of literature as well as a machine] s'engendre lentement par la collaboration accidentelle ou naturelle de beaucoup de consciences en mouvement, cherchant chacune de son c6te, apportant chacune son petit brin de paille ou d'herbe au nid commun ; puis un moment arrive souvent ou ce travail tout entier 20 The Social Mind and Education. social consciousness. Obviously, definite social self- consciousness is possible only in advanced societies in which the means exist for making accurate observations, organizing them carefully, and distributing them widely, and in which on the basis of such knowledge there are Institutions for deliberation, decision, and execution. Social self-consciousness is a characteristic of social ma- turity, and the correlative of social purpose.' Once more it is necessary to guard a general statement. The phenomena of social self-consciousness are clearly marked in connection with the activities of governments, but they are not so easily distinguished in the innumer- able less formal and orderly procedures of the social mind. But even in governments it is obvious that except in rare cases and in a most general way, social self-consciousness is really confined to comparatively small groups which examine the data available, see the relations involved, reach decisions, and carry out policies. Democracies differ from autocracies in the area of self-consciousness, which in the former case might ideally extend to every mature mind, in the latter be confined to a small cabinet. * Thus the social tradition does not grow as a result of the commence et se termine dans un meme esprit, d'ou un invention parfait en naissant, telle que le telephone, comma I'a remarque Reuleaux 3, propos des machines, jaillit un jour ex abrupto. Ce moment n'arrive pas toujours, mais toujours on y tend. Autrement dit, tout s'opere primitivement par multi-conscience et s'opere en suit ou tend a s'op6rer par uni-conscience.'" — La logique sociale, p. 201. Tarde further illustrates his point by asserting that the varying usage of different authors produces a " pluri-conscious " spelling, but when an academy fixes the usage it becomes " uni-conscious." Ibid., p. 202. The social function of ^/ozr* (fame, notoriety, novelty, celebrity) is, in Tarde's view, to enable inventions to penetrate the social consciousness. Ibid., p. 121. 1 L. F. Ward : " Sociology and Biology," Am. Jour, of Sociology, Nov., 1895. 2 It is in connection with the state that the idea of the self-conscious individu- ality of society has been chiefly insisted upon. The following is typical of a certain class of thinkers : " C'est le ' moi public ' ou Etat qui est le cerveau du corps politique, comme le cerveau est I'Etat du corps physique."— Jean Izoulet : Z,a cite moderne, p. 353. The Social Mind and Its Development. 21 self-conscious activity of society as a whole. While from time to time new observations and discoveries may pene- trate the social consciousness, they are put in their rela- tions and organized into the social memory by the purposeful efforts of small groups to which, in the de- velopment of collective thought, certain portions of the social tradition have been intrusted/ These groups represent the self-consciousness of society in a less definite and precise but essentially the same way as do legislatures and cabinets.^ To confine attention to those groups which are directly concerned in the organization of social knowledge, it is obvious that they are self-conscious in the sense that each individual is in communication with every other and knows that his own theories, experiments, and researches are related to the activities of the rest. He adopts a plan of work adjusted in the main to the pursuits of his 1 The recent discovery of Professer Rontgen is a case in point. By means of the press the main facts quickly entered the social mind, i. e., the same general state of consciousness was common to almost all individuals of intelligence. The discovery is the object of a social self-consciousness confined to a comparatively small group of specialists who aim to relate the new fact definitely to other observed phenomena and systematically to carry on further investigations. 2 Schaffle has worked out an elaborate social psychology in which he discusses the general consciousness {allgemeine Bewusstsein) and social self-consciousness {Selbstbewusstsein). He employs the theory of the threshold of consciousness in an ingenious way. " Nicht jede Idee tritt ins allgemeine Bewusstsein, d. h. ins Bewusstsein der centralen Collectivorgane oder gar in das Bewusstsein aller Individuen. Nur ein sehr kleiner Theil aller geistigen Ereignisse des socialen Lebens wird den Centralorganen bewusst." — BauundLeben des socialen Korpers, I. Auf., Bd. I., S. 403. By the economy of this arrangement the central organs of government are spared the distraction of considering many details which do not get above the threshold {Schwelle). As to social self-consciousness Schaffle makes an important discrimination: "Ein ' vollkommenes Selbstbewusstsein,' welches alle neben und nach einander vorkommenden geistigen Ereignisse des socialen Korpers vollkommen einheitlich, dem Inhalt und der Zeitfolge nach, in sich zusammensasste, ist auch in socialen Korper nicht wahrzunehmen."— 75zc?,, S. 408. The psychical labor is divided among groups so that social self- consciousness is distributed rather than concentrated. Only in governmental activities is there an approach to genuine collective self-consciousness, but even there only a small portion of the social life is concerned. 22 The Social Mind and Education. fellow-students and aims at a more or less definite co- operation with them to attain a certain end. At the same time the contents of the social memory, so far as they relate to his special task, are in his consciousness and are undergoing constant revision and modification as new truth comes to light. ^ In marked contrast with this procedure are the processes of the savage mind. The primitive group in its organi- zation for war may display an incipient self-consciousness, but in the rationalizing of daily experiences there is com- plete unconsciousness. The social tradition is homo- geneous or shows only the beginnings of differentiation. Each experience is explained and adjusted not to others of a similar nature but to the needs of the moment^ — for even the primitive mind demands subjective unity. There may be social consciousness in a savage tribe, but social self-consciousness emerges only as the group begins to specialize its tradition and organize its psychical labor, setting up the communicating apparatus which these proc- esses involve. In a broad sense it may be said that social knowledge advances from a homogeneous and empirical to a highly 1 The importance of bibliographies is emphasized in this view. Just in so far as a scientist isolates himself from his fellow-workers and fails to keep himself informed as to their achievements, he withdraws himself from the self-conscious social mind, thereby either impairing his own work or wasting his time and energy in useless duplications. The attempt of German anatomists to devise a systematic nomenclature is an admirable illustration of self-conscious cooperation. It is proposed to substitute about 5,000 terms rationally constructed and related, for the old terminology of more than 20,000 names vaguely conceived and variously employed in different works. This is a step from unconsciousness to self-consciousness, from hap- hazard growth to purposeful construction. 2 " Les societes primitives n'ont pas de conception physique ou sociale du monde ; elles vivent au jour le jour, obeissant principalement aux conditions les plus g6nerales de leurs milieux, a leur besoins et leur instincts guerriers econo- miques et gen^siques, lesquels sont, de tous leurs besoins, les plus simples, les moins Aleves et les plus irresistibles." — De Greef: V evolution des croyances et des doctrines politiques, p. 27. The Social Mind and Its Development. 23 differentiated and rationalized tradition, and that the pro- cedure, characterized in its early stages by social un- consciousness, tends constantly to become increasingly purposeful. ^ Yet this description is partial and needs a comple- mentary statement. If this were the whole truth the term social memory or tradition would be inapplicable. There would be merely social memories and traditions. But as has been hinted, the stream of social consciousness does not flow always in clearly defined and separate channels, it is constantly dividing and combining in the minds of men. To change the figure, the social tradition has grown out of the life experiences of the race. Each new appearance had to be explained and fitted with the old and familiar so that things might hang together and satisfy the otherwise distracted mind.^ Thus, from the very beginning, social tradition, a product of a unified life, had a certain unity in itself. Many of its elements grouped themselves into nuclei of facts in relations of obvious causality, but there were wide gaps which had to be filled with animistic and volitional agencies. Yet in some fashion the daily life was pieced together and the tradition which grew out of it gained coherence. 1 Durkheim has described the gradual progress of the collective mind from the concrete to the abstract which is closely related to the advance from social unconsciousness to self-consciousness. In a small society where all individuals have the same environment the common consciousness has a concrete character, but in larger groups, extending over a broader and more varied area, the col- lective conceptions become abstract. — De la division du travail social, p. 318. Durkheim also points out that the sciences developed from the arts, from the problems of daily life which were first practically solved and afterward rationally explained. — Les regies de la methode sociologique , p. 23. 2 " Pour sentir combien ce besoin est profond et imperieux, il suffit de penser un instant aux efFets physiologiques de P etonnement, et de considerer que la sensa- tion la plus terrible que nous puissons eprouver est celle qui se produit toutes les fois qu'un phenom^ne nous semble s'accomplir contradictoirement aux lois naturelles qui nous sont famili^res." — August Comte : Cours de philosophie posi- tive, Tome I., p. 52. 24 The Social Mind and Education, The same objective and subjective factors have been at work throughout ttie whole process of social evolution. Social life with all its increasing complexity has never lost its unity, and the human mind, bewildering as has been the increase of knowledge, has never ceased its efforts to * ' see things together." Social knowledge, therefore, has grown not only by division but by combination. As Spencer has so clearly pointed out : ' ' There has all along been higher specializa- tion, that there might be a larger generalization ; and a deeper analysis that there might be a better synthesis. Each larger generalization has lifted sundry specializations still higher, and each better synthesis has prepared the way for still deeper analysis."^ Emerging social self- consciousness has been directed not only to the division of the social tradition and the elaboration of its parts but also to the recombination of them into a higher unity. Up to this point, general statement has been employed, for the sake of presenting the facts as clearly as possible and to avoid the confusion which might be involved in the premature use of special terms. It now remains to inquire how this view of the social mind may be stated in terms of the familiar intellectual tasks of men. Common or empirical knowledge forms a part of the social tradition and enters social consciousness, but is not a product of social self-consciousness. ' ' We break the solid plenitude of fact," says James, **into separate essences, conceive generally what only exists particularly, and by our classifications, leave nothing in its natural neighbor- hood, but separate the contiguous and join what the poles divorce."^ Such classification and rationalizing, purposeful efforts to reduce the world of phenomena to 1 Essays : Scientific y Political ^ and Speculative, Vol. II., p. 29. ^Psychology, Vol. II., p. 634. The Social Mind and Its Development. 25 order and system produce sciences. Common knowledge is "untested and unanalyzed consciousness," while science is knowledge ' ' in its completest and purest form. ' ' ^ The self-conscious element of the social memory, therefore, contains the sciences. From this point of view the prog- ress of the sciences is the extension of the area of self- consciousness in the social tradition. Common knowledge, originally chaotic and haphazard, is gradually ordered, organized, and brought under the reign of law. ^ The methodical organization and enrichment of the social tradition have been achieved by division of labor which has become increasingly minute. "Nous sommes loin du temps," says Durkheim, "ou la philosophie ^tait la science unique ; elle est fragmentee en un multitude de disciplines sp6ciales dont chacune a son objet, sa methode, son esprit."^ He quotes also a passage from De Can- dolle,'* who calls attention to the fact that in the epoch of Leibnitz and Newton the savant had two or three designa- tions, such as mathematician, astronomer, and physician. By the end of the eighteenth century several titles were still necessary to indicate the achievements, in more than one of the sciences and departments of letters, of men like Wolf!, Haller, and Charles Bonnet. In the nineteenth century this difficulty of description no longer remains, or at least is very rare. Candolle predicts that the dual profession of investigator and teacher will soon be 1 Flint : " Philosophy as a Scientia Scientiarum," Princeton Review, November^ 1878. 2 " La succession des 4tats de conscience primitivement, desordonnee et fortuite, s'organise peu a pen par I'activite de I'esprit. Elle ne devient intelli- gible pour lui que parce qu'il y met un ordre ; et par I'idee d'ordre on arrive ainsi a 1' idee de loiy Quoted from a review of Andre Lalande's Lectures sur la philosophie des sciences, by Charles Andler in La revue philosophique, Tome XIX., p. 329. 3 De la division du travail social, p. 2. 4 Histoire des sciences et des savants, 2me Edition, p. 263. ' 26 The Social Mind and Education. definitely differentiated. Comte commented emphatically upon the increasing specialization of his day, and sounded a note of warning which is still reechoing in popular phrases. ^ In terms of the social mind such specialization has been shown to be a dividing up of the social self-consciousness and the formation of groups to each of which a certain class of phenomena is intrusted. Each science, therefore, ' ' est le fruit d' une collaboration s6culaire entre des genera- tions de savants. ' ' ^ The advance of each science displays the processes of analysis and synthesis, the examination of details, and the recombination into a whole, a movement of which Froebel wrote : "I find in pure thought the type and law of all development. ' ' ^ The same movement which within the social mind sub- divides the collective tradition into sciences and arts, characterizes also the development of these special ele- ments. ''Division, analysis," declares Flint, "is a neces- sary and inevitable condition of progress both in life and science. Every stage of progress must be consequent on a stage of division, spontaneous or reflective, industrial or scientific. ' "* But division and analysis are only half the process. Combination, synthesis, render a complementary service. Just as each science is organized into coherence, so all the elements of the social tradition are constantly tending toward integration in philosophy. The history of philosophy has been described by Falck- enberg as "the philosophy of humanity, that great in- 1 Loc. cit., Tome I., p. 23. 2 Tarde : La logique sociale, p. 214. 3 Quoted by Miss Blow in Symbolic Education from a letter of Froebel to Krause. 4 Robert Flint : loc, cit. The Social Mind afid Its Development. 27 dividual which . . . approaches by a necessary and certain growth of knowledge the one all-embracing truth which is rich and varied beyond our conception."^ As we have seen, humanity from the beginning has sought to unify its experiences, to explain all phenomena. This constant effort resulted at first in socially unconscious ex- planations which postulated the active agency of super- natural beings, and gradually with the increase of empirical or common-knowledge attributed all that happened to the power of a single God. This is the well-known theological stage of Comte's Philosophie Positive.^ It is impossible to mark off into definite stages the progress of collective thought. Only the tendency can be characterized. Fiske has described the movement implied in Comte's theory as progress from the more to the less anthropomorphic,^ and Spencer has shown that in essential nature there is no difference between the theological, metaphysical, and positive stages, that all alike involve ' ' the postulating of some external existence, and the postulating of this ultimate existence involves a state of consciousness (in positive philosophizing) indistinguishable from the other two.'"' The movement may also be described as progress from social unconsciousness to social self-consciousness, from 1 Loc. cit., p. 2. 2 " En d'autres termes, I'esprit humain, par sa nature, emploie successivement dans chacune de ses recherches trois methodes de philosopher, dont le car- actere est essentiellement different et meme radicalement oppose : d'abord la methode theologique, en suite la methode metaphysique, et enfin la methode positive." — Loc. cit., Tome I., p. 3. 3 " There are not three successive or superposed processes. There is one con- tinuous process which (if I may be allowed to invent a rather formidable word in imitation of Coleridge) is best described as a continuous process of deanthropo- morphization or the stripping off of the anthropomorphic attributes with which primeval philosophy clothed the unknown power which is manifested in phe- nomena." — Outlines of Cosmic Philosophy , Vol. I., pp. 175-176. 4 Essays : " Reasons for Dissenting from the Philosophy of M. Comte," Vol. II., p. 127. 28 The Social Mind and Education, spontaneous, unreflective explanations to ordered, system- atic, and purposeful investigation and conclusion. Be- tween these extremes there are many grades of partial self-consciousness that correspond in general to Comte's metaphysical stage which he himself conceived and de- scribed as a transition from the first to the third rather than as a clearly differentiated period.^ The familiar "law of the three stages," therefore, may be restated more exactly in terms of social self-consciousness. Each science passes gradually from unconscious empiri- cism to socially self-conscious or reflective organization and interpretation, just as philosophy in its attempt to interrelate and unify the sciences advances from more or less instinctive explanations to definitely planned and systematic efforts to construct a rational conception of the whole. Again, the order in which the sciences become the objects of the reflective social mind clearly depends upon more factors than Comte has indicated.^ The vary- ing simplicity and consequent progressive dependence of the phenomena themselves constitute only one of the causes which determine their relative rates of advance into social self-consciousness. Phenomena become the objects of reflective explanation not merely in the order of their 1 " La premiere est le point de depart n6cessaire de Tintelligence humaine; la troisifeme, son etat fixe et d^finitif ; la seconde est uniquement destin^e a servir de transition." — Loc. cit., Tome I., p. 3. 2 Comte's principle of decreasing generality and cumulative dependence in the classification of the sciences was also made to serve as an explanation of the order in which the sciences have advanced through the " three stages." The well-known heirarchy is mathematics, astronomy, physics, chemistry, biology (including transcendental biology — an abortive psychology), and social physics, or sociology. It should be said in justice to Comte that he himself recognized and admitted that the development and sequence was by no means rigidly linear. " On voit, en effet, que, quel que parfaite qu'on pfit la supposer, cette classification ne saurait jamais etre rigoureusement conforme & I'enchainement historique des sciences. Quoi qu'on fasse, on ne pent eviter enti^rement de presenter comme anterieure telle science qui aura cependant besoin, sous quelques rapports par- ticuliers plus ou moins important, d' emprunter des notions a une autre science classee dans un rang posterieur. — Loc. cit., Tome I., p. 68, The Social Mi7id and Its Development. 29 simplicity, but in proportion as they are (<2) conspicuous or obtrusive, forcing themselves on the attention of men, (Jj) frequent, demanding theories by their very iteration, {/) concrete, seeking solution in definite tangible forms rather than in abstract relations, and {d) accessible or controllable within the natural or artificial range of human examination and analysis. ^ Manifestly when all these influences are taken into the account the linear nature of Comte's law, based upon only one, must be greatly modified. The traditions of the social mind advance together in relations of mutual inter- dependence, the simplest aiding the more complex, while the latter often react in a most important way upon the former. In recognizing this organic growth of the social memory, it is unnecessary to go with Spencer to the extreme of wholly denying the existence of any order of progress based on the natural dependence of phenomena themselves. Even when Comte's rigid statement has been duly modified to include the other factors that have just been indicated, there remains the fact of objective dependence which cannot be ignored. ' * So far from having succeeded in overthrowing that scheme [Comte's hierarchy of the sciences]," says Flint, "he [Spencer] has only succeeded in modifying it. There is a logical de- pendence of the sciences. And why ? Just because there is a natural dependence of phenomena. . . . There being such a hierarchy of phenomena, it is scarcely con- ceivable that there should be no corresponding hierarchy of sciences."^ A clear distinction should be made at this point between the historical order, in which certain bodies of knowledge 1 Fiske : loc. cit., Vol. I., pp. 208-211. 2 " The Classification of the Sciences," Presbyterian Review, July, 1886, p. 523. 30 The Social Mind and Education. have emerged into social self-consciousness, and the sys- tematic, reflective arrangement of these sciences in a scheme or classification designed to display their relations. Spencer^ in demonstrating the inadequacy of Comte's historical argument seems to ignore this discrimination. It is quite conceivable that the chronological sequence might have been in many details other than it was, but the exigencies of logic compel men in a self-conscious effort to systematize the social tradition to recognize "a rational dependence of phenomena " — a necessity to which Spencer himself has yielded in the sequence of the various parts of his Synthetic Philosophy.^ But this distinction, which deserves passing notice here, will be emphasized from the pedagogical point of view in a subse- quent chapter. It remains to show more definitely that philosophy corresponds to the synthetic movement of the social mind — a tendency toward integration which, no less than differentiation, is a condition of progress. The early philosopher had as his field a comparatively homogeneous social tradition ; he regarded all wisdom as his proper pursuit.^ Aristotle made a rational effort to specialize the social mind by the preliminary divisions of his classi- fication.^ A classification of human knowledge is in its nature an act of social self-consciousness. "In classing the sciences," says Bacon, "we comprehend not only things already invented and known but also those omitted 1 Essays : Vol. II., " The Classification of the Sciences." Cf. also Fiske : loc. cit., Vol. I., pp. 199-212. 2 L. F. Ward: " Sociology in Its Relation to the Social Sciences," ^»z Ibid.,^. 165. Development of Social and Individual Thought. 89 Corresponding to these stages of developing self-con- sciousness are certain problems which human thought must successively attack. Here we should note the tran- sition from those gropings and feelings after explanations which have been noted in children to the purposeful examination and reflection of adult life. The demand for pleasurable feeling requires a thinking out of the means by which it is secured, /. e.^ a preliminary understanding of the laws of the physical world. Further experience and the recognition of happiness as a more remote ideal are accompanied by the rationalizing of subjective as well as objective phenomena. The immediate pleasure of interest in intellectual activity prepares materials for further reflec- tion. Finally, the fuller recognition of self demands a conscious effort to formulate more definitely an end which the self may purposefully seek. The ideal can be formed only out of the materials of past reflection which are organized into a conception of social life as a whole to which the individual self is intrinsically related. If we turn from the individual to the social mind, we observe that the latter is characterized not only by analy- sis and synthesis, by abstraction and generalization, but by increasing definiteness of purpose, the at least vague recognition of a common aim and a collective struggle to attain it. Ward asserts that social personality was the original stimulus to individual self-consciousness. ' ' Col- lective action for common ends is the essence of society, and in taking counsel together for the good of the tribe each one learns also to take counsel with himself for his own good on the whole ; with the idea of the common weal arises the idea of happiness as distinct from momen- tary gratification."* Professor Tufts has stated the parallel even more clearly : 1 James Ward : loc. cit., Vol. XX., p. 84. 90 The Social Mind and Education. ' ' True it is that in individual and in society the early life is impulsive, unrelated, with little conscious unity of pur- pose, yet with language and religion and art, with indus- trial and intellectual cooperation, many a people has come to * know what it wants, ' and to act unitedly in order to get it." ' To sum up, it may be asserted that in their development social and individual thought agree since they begin with an indefinite whole or "presentation continuum," which is gradually differentiated and progressively integrated, at first instinctively but later with increasingly definite pur- pose in response to an even clearer perception of an ideal aim or end. 1 American Journal of Sociology , January, 1896, p. 454. CHAPTER IV. THE SOCIAL MIND AND EDUCATION. The function of transmitting from one generation to the next the contents of the collective tradition has itself been characterized by increasing social self-consciousness. Beginning in the haphazard communication of empirical knowledge, dexterities, customs, and beliefs from parents to children, instruction has been more and more socialized and organized until in the great educational systems of modern nations societies purposefully seek to secure the orderly transmission and constant enrichment of the col- lective knowledge, feelings, and volitions, which, realized in individual consciousness, form the content of the social mind. In general, education may be regarded from the social point of view as a reflective effort to preserve the continuity and to secure the growth of the common tradition. Just as the successive states of consciousness in the individual form a coherent unity with which self or personality is associated, so society gains unity and self- consciousness from a well-organized and continuous collective tradition which therefore constitutes the essential vital principle of the social organism.^ Since the social mind can exist only in the minds of individuals, society 1 Fouill6e has emphasized this view in application to a nation and its educational system : " Le nation est un organisme dou6 d'une certaine conscience collective, quoique non concentree en un mot; nous consid6rons done comme une forme d'h^redit^ et d'identite organique a travers les ages tout ce qui maintient chez un peuple une continuity de caractSre, d'esprit, d'habitudes et d'aptitudes, en un mot, une conscience nationale et une volunt6 nationale. ... A nos yeux, le but dernier de I'^ducation est d'assurer non seulement le d^veloppement de la race, mais encore celui de la nationalite, de la Patrie." — V enseignement au point de vue national, p. vii. 91 92 The Social Mind and Education. seeks its own perpetuation and advancement by preparing the young gradually to appropriate the collective tradition in general, and by training a few minds to receive and elaborate its various highly specialized divisions. Thus, though individuals are constantly dying and others are taking their places, the social tradition not only persists but is progressively analyzed and synthesized, growing ever deeper and richer in truth, aesthetic and moral feeling, ideals, and aims. Education seeks, therefore, to relate individual consciousness intrinsically to the social mind.' The social organism is in final analysis a psychic organism. It is usual to contrast the social and individual aspects of education, often as though they were quite distinct and even antagonistic points of view. While society is chiefly concerned with socializing the pupil, the latter is supposed to gain most from a * ' development of his powers. ' ' We have noted in a previous chapter the predominant influ- ence of the collective mind upon individual consciousness. The so-called ''powers" or activities of the mind are simply abstractions from concrete states of consciousness. These latter have a social content. "There is no indi- vidual man," says Professor Tufts, "for ethics, for psy- chology, for logic, or for sociology, except by abstraction — that is if by individual man we mean a being not influenced by social forces — nor are there any feelings, thoughts, or volitions in any man which are independent of such forces."^ In other words, the individual can exercise his powers only upon social materials, and in attempting to secure for himself discipline he appropriates in some measure the social tradition and may be the means of its transmission and further elaboration.^ The essen- 1 Mackenzie : Introduction to Social Philosophy , p. i8o. 2 American Journal of Sociology, January, 1896, p. 455. 3 This is not to deny that there are disciplines which are of much more remote social value than others. The Social Mind and Education. 93 tially social nature of education is being more and more fully recognized. The Culture Epoch theory, at which we just now glanced, is an illustration in point. Even Dr. William T. Harris, who is naturally and properly interested in the psychological side of education, has emphatically declared that a fundamental educational philosophy must be based not on physiology or even on psychology, but on sociology. ' If we regard the content of consciousness, the individual is almost an abstraction. It is the thought of humanity which he thinks.^ "It is only through the devel- opment of the whole race that any one man can develop."^ The harmonizing of the supposed antithesis between individual and social education has been admirably stated by Guyau in these words : * * Pedagogy might be defined as the art of adapting new generations to those conditions of life which are the most intensive and fruitful for the individual and the species. It has been asked if the object of education is individual or social ; it is simulta- neously individual and social ; it is, to speak accurately, the search for means to bring the most intensive individual existence into harmony with the most extensive social life."^ The individual realizes his own possibilities by 1 Educational Review , June, 1893. 2 " How much more do we experience when we travel through ancient Egypt with Herodotus, when we stroll through the streets of Pompeii, when we carry ourselves back to the gloomy period of the crusades, or to the golden age of Italian art, now making the acquaintance of a physician of Moli^re, and now that of a Diderot or of a D'Alembert. What a great part of the life of others, of their character and their purpose, do we not absorb through poetry and music ! . . . How great and comprehensive does self become in this conception ; and how insignificant the person ! Egoistical systems both of optimism and pessi- mism perish with their narrow standards of the import of intellectual life. We feel that the real pearls of life lie in the ever-changing contents of consciousness, and that the person is merely an indifferent symbolical thread on which they are strung." — Ernst Mack: Popular Scientific Lectures (tr. by McCormack), pp. 234-235- 8 Mackenzie : loc. cit., p. 180. 4 Education and Heredity (tr. by W. J. Greenstreet), pp. xviii., xix. 94 The Social Mind and Education. incorporating in himself the achievements of the race and he contributes to social progress by modifying and im- proving in never so slight a way the tradition intrusted to him. But even this service cannot be well rendered in isolation. Only by purposeful cooperation are the best and most permanent results secured. It has been shown that in a general way the social and the individual mind develop according to the same law — by analysis and synthesis, by the accumulation and organi- ' zation of experience, and by the formation of ideals from instinctive, unconscious activities to reflective, purposeful, self-conscious efforts. The value of this theory depends upon the interpretation of it. The dangers involved in the application of this principle have been pointed out by Professor Dewey, who, while admitting the truth of the parallel "in a general way," insists that the ontogenetic series must be the determining factor with the educator. The phylogenetic series may and does serve a useful purpose in suggesting methods and in some measure materials of instruction, but the moment one attempts to assign anything like definite, corresponding stages in the two series, and to reason from one to the other, the probability is that the resulting educational system will be largely artificial and doctrinaire.^ The fallacy of relying in any specific way upon the phylogenetic series may be made clearer by reference to a theory already mentioned, which has recently been defi- nitely stated by Baldwin. He asserts that by means of organically consolidated habit and accommodation, which may be perpetuated either through natural selection solely or through the transmission of acquired characters, certain organic * ' short-cuts ' ' may be effected so that the individ- 1 Illinois State School Journal, December, 1895. Reprinted in Second Year Book of the Herbart Society. The Social Mind and Education. 95 ual will omit in his own evolution certain elements or stages which were essential in the development of his ancestors. ^ This point is further illustrated by contrasting animals and men. In the case of the former, if higher centers of coordi- nation be removed, in a short time the function will be resumed by a lower center, but in men, the connections having been established directly and not via the subordi- nate segments, the injury or removal of the chief directing apparatus results in a permanent loss of functional power. ^ But there is still another though similar influence at work ' to modify the strict parallel. In adjustment to a changing environment, mental structure is being constantly accom- modated or adapted. * ' By accommodation, with the new adaptations which it works, old habits are broken up and new coordinations are made which are more complex or new organic growths secured which simplify a function. These gains are again clenched by heredity or selection and constitute further variations from phylogeny. ' ' ^ Baldwin also calls attention to the biological theory that the course of development of the embryo is dependent upon the amount of food, called "food yolk," which the ^^% supplies. It is asserted that a plentiful supply hastens progress toward maturity, i. e. , abbreviates the recapitula- tion process.* This theory of organic growth is inter- preted in terms of mental life as follows : ''Abundant food supply in the shape of lessons, rich suggestions in its social and educational life, urging forward in tasks of mind, etc., should give precocious mental development in the sense of early maturity of mind. The stages normally prescribed for natural growth may then be abbreviated. 1 Mental Development in the Child and the Race (2d Ed.), p. 20. 2 Ibid., pp. 21-22. 3 Ibid., p. 23. ^ Ibid., p. 29. g6 The Social Mind and Education. The same effect is produced also by accidents of environ- ment. Newsboys and street gamins become sharp and mentally agile to a phenomenal degree from their methods of life, while boys reared in the artificial seclusion and solitude of a single son, educated by a tutor in his father's house, show the contrary character."^ We are justified in assuming, therefore, that to organic modifications correspond certain psychical variations by which the individual escapes some of the stages through which his ancestors passed or through which the thinking of the race was compelled to develop. In view of these facts, we reaffirm that any system which regards the phylogenetic series as a norm to which the psychogenesis of the individual must conform in any definite, precise manner, must be regarded as arbitrary. Yet, on the other hand, the development of the race and that of the indi- vidual so clearly correspond in a general way that the facts of the social mind may by analogy suggest a more careful examination of the ontogenetic processes, and a conse- quent modification of educational methods. From the cognitive point of veiw, instruction ideally aims to incor- porate in individual consciousness the social tradition as a generalized whole and some part of it in a specialized form. In this attempt, the educator fully recognizes the fact that consciousness is a growth, not a receptacle for information, that the subjective process is one of assimilation and organ- ization, not merely of accretion or aggregation. There- fore, he supervises and directs phenomena of development, not those of manufacture. The aim is to have the pupil reach the highest intellectual and moral standpoint of the race in the briefest time and with the greatest economy of effort. This standpoint, however, is not that of mere information, nor of abstract ' ' intellectual power, ' ' nor of liSzrf., pp. 32-33. The Social Mind and Education. 97 useful automatic conduct, but it involves knowledge incor- porated in personality, an active organic growth possess- ing ability to assimilate new materials and advance to higher organization. It has been said that education seeks to secure results in the briefest time and with the greatest economy of effort. The recapitulation theory in any form requires rapidity of individual development. Manifestly, even if all the phylo- genetic stages are repeated, some of them must at best be merely suggested rather than actually reproduced. The difficulty of detecting the stages is obvious and any system dependent upon a discovery of them at all exact is evi- dently at a serious disadvantage. Economy of effort implies cooperation with natural forces instead of opposition to them. It recognizes, e. g., a development of consciousness and seeks in general to take advantage of its laws, not to attain an end apparently in violation of them. If, therefore, an educational theory be based upon detailed and complete recapitulation it can at best only urge the teacher to hasten on through some of the stages, but if it recognize the possibility of omitting stages altogether, it may advise purposeful ' ' short-cuts ' ' which neither waste time nor ignore principles of growth. From this point of view, the educational function may be described, though possibly not defined, as a purposeful social effort to effect " short-cuts" in the mental develop- ment of the individual as well as to hasten the whole process so that he may in the briefest time and in a thoroughly natural ' way attain the standpoint of the race, iThis term "natural" is one to conjure with in educational theory. In one sense mental development will be natural {i. e., in accordance with the fixed sequences and coexistences of psychological phenomena) in any event. Only the term supernatural can describe the opposite situation. But there are various degrees of resistance which mental processes offer to externally directed influ- ences. Economy of effort, elimination of friction, following linesofleast resistance, are phrases which express the idea that one plan is more ' ' natural " than another. 98 The Social Mind and Education. i. e.^ be intrinsically related to the social tradition. Dr. Paul has pointed out the service of language in enabling one individual to induce at once in the mind of another — who has the same sensuous or conceptual ma- terials — an association which the former has spent a long time in organizing. "It is owing to this economy of labor and time to which one individual has assisted another, that the latter is in his turn in a position to employ the result of this economy to set up a further connection for which the first individual had no time at his disposal.'" The educator methodically modifying the pupil's environment and, when language communication has been set up, through direct suggestion, aims systemati- cally to control the presentations of the child's mind and to guide the activity of self in conscious association. In other words, from both the mechanical and volitional sides of the mind's operations influences of abridgment and omission are brought to bear. The learning of language illustrates both the general parallel and the ' ' short-cut ' ' theories. It is true that the child unconsciously learns to speak. ' * And, ' ' says Paul, * ' the case is much the same with the period in the development of the human race which originally created language."^ It is also a fact that the child employs de- nominations before verbs and later still applies modifying terms, moods, etc.^ The advance from vagueness to definiteness of thought is objectified in language. In a general way, therefore, the process of individual growth in speech corresponds to the historical development of a language considered as a phylogenetic series. Again, as Spencer has pointed out, consciousness or reflection in 1 Principles of Languages (Strong's tr.), p. xl. 2 Ibid., p. xlvi. 3 Sully : Studies of Childhood, pp. 170-182. The Social Mind and Education, 99 language, i. e., the study of grammar, must follow its unconscious acquisition.' The confusion of the logical with the pedagogical order — so common in educational theory — has its classical illustration in Pestalozzi's plan — later abandoned by its author — of beginning with analyti- cally simple but meaningless syllables which were subse- quently to be combined into significant words. ^ It is one thing to recognize and utilize this general correspondence, but quite another to assert complete and detailed recapitulation. The latter theory might be re- garded as demanding instruction in archaic language forms — e. g. , the old plurals and verb-endings of early English. As a matter of fact, influences of inheritance and environ- ment introduce factors which quite change the situation. It is asserted on the organic side that by "a child in- heriting a direct tendency to respond to a visual stimulus with movements of the tongue and larynx would be saved the long course of development which has been necessary phylogenetically for the establishment of the direct connec- tion now very generally held to exist between the visual and motor speech centers, with a corresponding saving on the mental side. ' ' ^ From the objective side, moreover, the materials for imitation and the stimulating and varied suggestions '^ of a rich social environment induce a marvelous development of speech. The child of four or five, reared in a cultivated home, quickly and unconsciously acquires a vocabulary 1 " In short, as grammar was made after language, so ought it to be taught after language ; an influence which all who recognize the relationship between the evolution of the race and of the individual will see to be unavoidable." — Educa- tion, p. 106. 2 Wie Gertrud ihre Kinder lehrt (tr. by Holland and Turner), pp. 90-95. 3 Baldwin : Mental Development, p. 26. 4 For an interesting discussion of the r61e of suggestion in education cf, Guyau : Education and Heredity (tr. by W. J. Greenstreet), pp. 12-45; Felix Thomas: La suggestion: sonrole dans V education; and Baldwin : loc. cit., iQgri6g. lOO The Social Mind and Education. and power of expression which is often a source of surprise even to parents. In so far as such acquisitions are chiefly the result of imitation, social approval of others, or mere subjective pleasure in rhythms of speech, they are to be deprecated as predominantly verbal, but when they are fairly well coordinated with mental images developed out of perceptions, they stand for genuine ' ' short-cuts ' ' in mental development and organic habits. So much by way of illustrating the respective functions of the two theories which merge into one. The recapitulation aspect empha- sizes what the older education did not recognize, at least with clear consciousness, viz., that instruction cannot simply effect one great ' ' short-cut, ' ' but must direct a process of growth. On the other hand, the ' * short-cut ' ' theory points out the danger of underestimating the possi- bilities of rapid, abbreviated development, and providing for ''stages" which have disappeared from the onto- genetic series. Both views may be carried to extremes. Their synthesis represents education as recognizing the general parallel of individual and race development, but as also consciously seeking to take advantage of all * ' short- cuts ' ' for the sake both of the unit and of society. In the light of this synthesis, the so-called inductive and deductive forms of reasoning assume new meaning. Professor Dewey has shown that the distinction between these two processes is one of direction rather than of essential nature. Both connect the universal with the particular. One starts with the particular and relates it to the universal, the other imposes the universal on the particular. In either case knowledge is the result.^ But even though the results are similar the processes differ in their demands upon self-activity and in the time which they require. Inductive reasoning implies experience, 1 Psychology y pp. 224-225. The Social Mind a7id Education. loi examination of details, association by similarity, and, finally, generalization. An induction is a result of growth. Deduction, on the other hand, starts from the general or universal and by association and dissociation subsumes or interprets the particular. Although the processes are analytically distinguished they really involve each other. The emphasis, however, is laid now on one, now on the other. In education induction is advocated by those who recognize the ontogenetic and phylogenetic parallelism. Just as the race reached its generalizations from a mass of empirical observations, so the child must gradually ad- vance through his own activity from particulars to uni- versal. The Emile^ insists upon this order of "nature," and Spencer' s Education ^ is largely influenced by the same idea. On the other hand, the "short-cut" theory in its ex- treme form relies upon deduction. It would save the time consumed in reaching generalizations. These, formulated by the race, should be transferred at once to the indi- vidual in order that society may advance in knowledge. ^ Here we are confronted again by the old antithesis. Individual development demands gradual growth through induction ; social welfare requires the rapid communica- tion of the collective tradition through deduction. Once 1 Payne's translation, pp. 134-139. 2 Pp. 124-125. 3 This does not mean that " short-cuts " are confined to deduction. By guid- ance and the conscious modification of the environment the processes of induction may be greatly abridged. Tarde's theory of the social syllogism is applicable here. In his view, the knowledge, judgments, and decisions of the race form major premises, i. e., general scientific principles, maxims, rules of conduct, etc. The major premises are imposed upon individuals who supply out of personal experiences the minor premises and hence reach conclusions. All conduct, therefore, is the resultant of generalized race experience and individual applications. Society seeks to extend these majors as quickly as possible to all individuals. — La logique sociale, pp. 53-61. I02 The Social Mind and Education, more we may reconcile these apparently antagonistic theories by asserting that together they are able to satisfy the requirements for both genetic development and for ' ' short-cuts. " ^ In the earlier period chief emphasis may be laid on induction, but with the growth of self-activity and consciousness, deductive ' ' short-cuts ' ' may be eco- nomically introduced.^ Assuming, then, that for the first few years of childhood the inductive process must in the nature of things pre- dominate, we may ask what problem first confronts the teacher. To introduce formal studies would be to impose deduction. As we have seen, it has required centuries of thinking by the race to elaborate these divisions of the social tradition. Here the phylogenetic series suggests that the vague unity of primitive man's environment corre- sponds to the undifferentiated presentation continuum of the infant. Both have to be analyzed and synthesized into more and more definite details and ever higher unities. The original unity is social life, even though it be merely 1 Prof. W. N. Hailman has elaborated this idea in a paper on Organic Relations of Studies in Human Development, in which he distinguishes "developing instruction" and "didactic instruction," and discusses the function of each. The former he recommends for the earlier period, while he would put chief reliance on the second for the later stages of grammar and high school. — Reprint from Proceedings of the Jacksonville Conference on Superintendence, pp. 10-13. 2 Lester F, Ward urges the deductive or "short-cut" theory in these words : "The idea that children in this enlightened age must go back to the ages of barbarism and grope along as their ancestors were compelled to do for crumbs of knowledge, that they must be allowed to get all kinds of errors into their minds along with a few truths because this was the method by which the primitive man first acquired ideas, . . . this entire scheme for converting education into a sort of social ontogenesis is false in principle, is not supported by any proper interpretation of the teachings of science, and is directly opposed to those furnished by every progressive step in the civilization of the race. " Nothing is calculated more forcibly to impress upon us the conviction that the mass of mankind must get their knowledge through instruction and not through experience, nor yet through personal observation and research, than to note how such great minds as those of Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Bacon, and Newton groped about in darkness and doubt respecting the questions of planetary revolu- tion, tides, gravitation, light, etc., with which every schoolboy is now familiar." — Dynam,ic Sociology, Vol. II., pp. 628-629. The Social Mind and Education. 103 the microcosm of the nursery or the family circle. This presentation continuum and the potential activity of the child are the factors out of which gradually by action and reaction are evolved a universe and a self-conscious personality.^ The stimulus of sensations arouses the activity of self, which, little by little, acquires experi- ence and progressively interprets and reinterprets the objective world, gaining at the same time clearer knowl- edge of its own nature. Yet at the basis of all this mental activity lie sensations, actual physically mediated raw materials out of which the products of thought are elabo- rated.^ Sensations are wholly individual facts. They may be in a large measure controlled by artificial external arrangements, but they cannot be dispensed with. Each individual must therefore work over, interpret, and assimi- late his own sensations.^ Clearness can come only from differentiation. Education, or rather instruction, has for its primary task not the teaching of subjects but the forma- tion of subjects or studies in the pupil's consciousness. It must help him to take apart the vague unity of his life, to associate, dissociate, identify, and discriminate as he forms ideal groups and makes generalizations. It is only when this process has been carried to a certain point that the idea of studies and disciplines, evolved out of race ex- perience, can be assimilated by the self. Verbal memory may deceive the superficial observer in this regard, but the laws of thought cannot be violated. It is in recog- nition of this principle that the new primary education purposely avoids prematurely superimposing the logical differentiations of the social mind upon its pupils, but rather seeks to aid them in reaching by their own efforts 1 Dewey : Psychology , pp. 4 and 5. i Ibid., p. 81. 8 Preyer : Infant Mind (tr. by Brown), pp. 66-69. I04 The Social Mind and Education. the idea of division and classification. With the further development of self-consciousness the conception of studies is readily assimilated and the whole self, vigorous from its earlier activities, reacts effectively and economically upon new materials, more than making up for the time appar- ently ' ' lost ' ' during the period of predominant sensation and spontaneous discovery. The function of interest in education is being more and more clearly perceived. Under its influence the organiza- tion and interpretation of sense-impressions goes on rapidly in the earlier years. Childish interest concerns itself not with abstract or formal pursuits which imply a relatively considerable development of self-consciousness, but rather with the immediate concrete facts of the environment, with daily life. In seeking to find expression for its own activity the child gradually associates and generalizes these phenomena, utilizing this knowledge for its own purposes. It speaks without consciousness of language, counts with no thought of mathematics ; walks, works, builds houses, dams rivulets in complete ignorance of mechanics and physics ; watches birds and gathers flowers with never a notion that these are kinds of knowledge labeled orni- thology and botany. For him life is a whole, a vague and indefinite unity, which he daily takes apart and puts together, gradually reading into it a deeper meaning as he perceives wider relations of likeness and sharper degrees of difference. It usually happens at about the period when this world unity is just beginning to display more or less clearly defined parts that the child is sent to school where subjects are thrust upon him and his universe divided up into study periods and text-books. Then life is taken apart indeed and happy is the pupil who can perceive some vague connection between the things he has loved out of doors and the subjects which he pursues in the The Social Mind and Education. 105 schoolroom. ' This critical period during which the trans- ition from spontaneous discrimination to logical division takes place has been too much neglected. Object lessons and observation classes have by no means solved the prob- lem. Here it is that the theory of parallelism may render service by at least compelling the ' ' short-cut ' ' process to prove that conditions are ripe for the introduction of the latter. The gradual development of consciousness is also a factor to be considered. Only as the self becomes more definitely aware of its own activity in relation to the objective world of things and men, and gains fixity of purpose can it really grasp the more abstract and system- atic forms of thought. The very fact of growth, therefore, demands that this transition from vague unity to logical partition, from un- conscious interest to self-determining effort, should extend over a long period and be achieved gradually and natu- rally. Attempts to force the process may result in apparent success, but only at a real ultimate sacrifice. The facile use of words without ideas is the clatter of machinery in a factory in which raw materials are scanty and poor. There may be sounds of activity, but the product will be disap- pointing. So the premature forcing of formal instruction to the neglect of sense-impressions and their spontaneous elaboration is barren in its results. It violates the laws of ontogenesis in an effort unduly to hasten the pupil's de- velopment toward the maturity of the race. The task of differentiation then is the primary under- taking of instruction. The pupil begins, as we have already 1 " The young q}s\\\A feels the oneness of nature and of life. 'The nursery is the place where study is most general and universal' (President Hyde). To the] six-year-old pupil the division of study into subjects has only just begun. Zoology, botany, meteorology, geology, agriculture, horticulture, astronomy, etc., all commence in the undifferentiated form of nature study." — Herman T. Lukens: "The Correlation of Studies," Educational Review, November, 1895. io6 The Social Mind and Education, insisted, with life as a whole, an indefinite unity out of which logical divisions are gradually to be discriminated, until differences are clearly apprehended. Then these are to be recombined ultimately into a deeper and richer con- ception or philosophy of the nature and end of society. In over- eagerness to impress the child with the varied ele- ments of knowledge education has sought in the past and is still attempting to superimpose an already specialized curriculum instead of helping the child gradually to differ- entiate the environment for himself. In the latter way the transition may be made naturally and easily as a result of the pupil's own activity. In describing the relation of analysis and synthesis Professor Dewey says : * ' The analytic recognition of separate elements is a later process. Psychologically, the synthesis precedes analysis."^ The mistake has been made of trying prematurely to force a logical analysis and of neglecting synthesis altogether. The child not only suffers from this artificial process of division, but in his own instinctive efforts to preserve his personality performs alone and unaided the acts of syn- thesis with great waste of energy and distraction of mind. The danger arising from forced analysis and the mental isolation of elements or studies has not escaped the atten- tion of educators. Plans for concentration, coordination, and correlation have been advanced with the aim of cor- recting the evils involved in breaking up the unity of life and thought into separated fragments. * ' Bring all things essentially related to each other to that connection in your mind which they have in nature, ' ' ^ wrote Pestalozzi. Yet this might be regarded as aiming at an ultimate or philo- sophical unity — the end rather than the beginning or mid- dle of the process. 1 Psychology, p. 99. 2 Wie Gertrudihre Kinder lehrt, p. 78. The Social Mind and Education. 107 Herbart insisted that the threads of thought ( Gedanken- fddeii) should be spun into a single cord, instead of being isolated in the mind by an arbitrary and artificial educa- tional system which at the stroke of the bell introduces a new and unrelated subject. ' Ziller, like Herbart, laid stress upon the ethical value of unified thought.^ Rein also points out that the person is a developing entity, that the ego does not originally possess unity but attains it in so far as the circle of thought is organized, not disconnected.^ The synthetic activity of the youthful mind cannot be relied upon to establish connections spontaneously between manifold and varied ideas. Instruction must specifically aim therefore to aid the pupil in attaining unity of consciousness, which is the primitive foundation of character.'* The idea that synthesis must accompany analysis in the normal devel- opment of thought has been carefully worked out in different systems to which the names concentration, corre- lation, and coordination have been applied." We are concerned not so much with the details of these plans as to discover whether they have anything in common aside from the very general theory already indicated. Concentration, which may be regarded as the original Herbartian proposal, demands the subordination of various pursuits to one or more studies or "centers." Rein distinguishes two spheres of knowledge : ( i ) Life of Man, and (2) Life of Nature, or culture studies and science 1 Psychologie, aten Teil. 2 " Durch Konzentration sorgt der Erziehungs-unterricht immer fiir das Dasein und die Erhaltung der Einheit des Bewussteins, d. h., der Personlichkeit, bei dem Zoglinge, und das ist eine wesentliche Voraussetzung fiir Sittlichkeit und Glau- ben." — Allgemeine Pddagogik. 3 Outlines of Pedagogics (tr. by C. C. and I. J. Van Liew), p. 103. 4 Ibid., p. 104. 5 Cf. article by H. T. Lukens on " The Correlation of Studies," Educational Re- view, November, 1895. io8 The Social Mind and Education. studies. They are to be related by means of geography primarily and the second group is to be subordinated to the first. Both are designed to educate the will of the pupil who "must acquire (i) an understanding of the limitations and aids that are based upon the ethical ideas, (2) an understanding of the limitations and aids that depend upon the relations of things in nature."^ In other words, the pupil brings these two groups as aids in inter- preting life. Other Herbartians insist upon regarding certain studies as themselves "centers" of concentration to which the remainder of the subjects must be related. F. A. McMurray, a prominent representative of this view, holds that literature in the earlier years and history in the upper grades are the real centers to which the whole curriculum must be adjusted. It is somewhat difficult to conceive of any study — an abstraction — as having an ap- parently objective existence in the sense that other subjects are related to it. This is to speak legitimately enough but nevertheless in figures. We recall the protest of Dr. Paul against the notion that parts of the "social mind" react upon each other. ^ All relating of ideas is effected in individual consciousness. Professor McMurray would surely admit that he uses the terms figuratively to describe processes which take place in the pupil's mind. More- over, some misapprehension may arise from the application of the term ' * study ' ' to any arbitrary group which . has been formed for purposes of classification or instruction. There is a vast difference between an analytic study like physics and a synthetic study such as literature. Litera- ture is in one view a social product, a reaction of an indi- vidual representing social forces against an environment of nature and man ; it is a reproduction or idealization of 1 Outlines of Pedagogics (tr. by C. C. and I. J. Van Liew), p. 113. 2 Supra, p. 68. The Social Mind and Education. 109 life in some of its manifold aspects. History is a more reflective picture of society conceived as developing in time. To assert, therefore, that literature and history are centers of concentration is simply to declare indirectly that social life is the external unity to which the self-active personality is all the while adjusting itself. In other words, there must be constant return to the center, the presenta- tion continuum out of which studies have been differen- tiated. Another plan may be described as coordination. This regards studies as naturally forming themselves into groups or ' ' cores, ' ' no one of which is subordinate to the rest. All are of equal importance and cooperate to produce a symmetrical ' * circle of thought. ' ' President DeGarmo stands for this scheme. He proposes three groups : (i) the humanistic, having an ethical content in literature and history, (2) the nature group, and (3) the economic, dealing with man and nature in interaction.* These three ' ' cores ' ' are described as lying parallel and somewhat independent. They may be coordinated by means of reading in the form of literature or, better still, by geography, which in its three forms, political, physical, and commercial, constitutes a bond of unity. The latter phase, indeed, gives the pupil "not only ... an enlarged conception of his own place and function in the world, but he learns practically the great ethical lesson that every part of the world, and every man in every part, is trying to serve self through service to others. ' ' ^ Clearly the attempt to combine knowledge of man, of nature, and of man in reaction with nature, is a recognition of the unity of social life, an effort to put back the elements of analysis into a more complete conception of reality. The 1 Herbart and the Herbartians , p. 243. 2 Ibid, p. 255. no The Social Mind and Education. real ' * core ' ' then is life, the point of departure for all studies, the center to which all return with their constantly increasing contributions. The Report of the Committee of Fifteen on * * The Corre- lation of Studies ' ' is disappointing in that it offers no very- definite plan. Its proposal has been described as * ' inter- relation of studies. ' ' ' Yet on the whole it emphasizes the social aspect of education in a marked way. * ' In a word," reads the report, "the chief consideration to which all others are to be subordinated, in the opinion of your committee, is this requirement of the civilization into which the child is born, as determining not only what he shall study in school, but what habits and customs he shall be taught in the family before the school age arrives ; as well as that he shall acquire a skilled acquaintance with some one of a definite series of trades, professions, or vocations in the years that follow school ; and furthermore, that this question of the relation of the pupil to his civiliza- tion determines what political duties he shall assume and what religious faith or spiritual aspirations shall be adopted for the conduct of his life. ' ' ^ The report regards language as forming the center of instruction in the ele- mentary school, but urges that more stress be laid on the meaning of words and recommends the use of literary selections which ' ' portray situations of the soul or scenes of life or elaborated reflections."^ That is, which help the child to interpret himself and his environment, by bringing all he learns to bear upon life. Geography is also regarded as extremely useful. Its study should begin with the pupil's immediate environment and thence work out into wider relations. The * * predominance of the human feature in a 1 H. T. Lukens : "Correlation of Studies," Educational Review , November, 1895. 2 Report of the Committee of Fifteen on " The Correlation of Studies " (anno- tated by George P. Brown), p. 5. 3 Ibid., p. 13. The Social Mind and Education. iii study ostensibly relating to physical nature ' ' is considered * * necessary and entirely justifiable. ' ' ' This pursuit is further defended as affording opportunities to study differ- ences in climate and products, the unifying function of commercial intercourse, and as impressing the youthful mind with the law of economic and social interdependence. Still another scheme is that of Colonel Parker, who re- gards the child as the center on whom the various sciences, conceived in a somewhat Comtean hierarchy, converge.^ McMurray has made the point that to call the child the center is either meaningless or a truism. He would regard a study such as literature or history as the center. ^ But we have already seen that this is an indirect approach to the view of social life as the real objective unity to which the self is related by its own activity. Colonel Parker's theory is therefore only another way of saying that all studies must be related and unified in the pupil's consciousness, i. ^A H', nR r.fi Threshold of consciousness, 86. 74i 77. 7». 90. T- V A £ Rein, W., 71, 72, 107. Toynbee, A., 136. Research, 120. Tradition, 15, 18, 22, 25, 30, 36, 37, 49, 84, Romanes, 75, 76, 86. 9i . 94- Rousseau, 71, loi. Treviranus, 60, 73. Royce, Josiah, 32, 35, 37, 56. IT"^'^'' .0 o Tufts, J. H., 68, 89, 92. Schaffle, A. E. Fr., 12, 21, 61, 62, 78, 79. Turgot, 59. Scholasticism, 53. Sciences, nature of, 25; growth of, 26, Unconsciousness, social, 27, 28, 80. 54, 56; order of development. 28-29; Unity of knowledge, 114 J?. organism of, 33-35, 37, 45. 134; differ ^^^ ^iew, C. C, 81. from philosophy, 35 ; unification of, ^. ^ 39. 50 ; origin of, 40, 83 ; abstract and ^^^ ^^^ ^ ' concrete. 47, 48. ,, 4, ' * ^ _ c If -A V QQ Von Baer, 35, 57, 60, 73. Self, idea of, 88-90. Self-consciousness, social. 19. 20, 23.24, Ward, J., 82, 89. 25, 34, 36. 37. 55, 59, 68. Ward, L. F., 16, 19, 20, 31, 34, 38, 48, 62, Seth, A., 38. J02, 119. Shields, C. W., 35, 48. Whewell, William, 39, 42, 50. Short-cuts in evolution, 78, 94, 95, 97, 98, Wolff, 25, 45, 73. 100, loi. 105, 135- Wundt. 35, 61. 68, 126. Small, A, W., 62. Smith, A., 59. Ziller, 70. 72, 81, 107. ERRATUM. On page 93, note 2, " Mack " should read ** Mach. 4