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International Education Series

EDITED BY

WILLIAM T. HARRIS, A. M., LL. D.

VOLUME XXXIII.

THE

PSYCHOLOGY OF NUMBER

AND ITS APPLICATIONS TO
METHODS OF TEACHING ARITHMETIC

BY

JAMES A. MCLELLAN, A. M., LL. D.

PRINCIPAL OF THE ONTARIO SCHOOL OF PEDAGOGY, TORONTO

AND

JOHN DEWEY, PH.D.

HEAD PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

"The art of measuring brings the world into subjection to man; the art
of writing prevents his knowledge from perishing along with himself: to-
gether they make man-what Nature has not made him-all-powerful and
eternal."-MOMMSEN.

NEW YORK

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY

COPYRIGHT, 1895,

BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.

ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED

AT THE APPLETON PRESS, U. S. A.

EDITOR'S PREFACE.

In presenting this book on the Psychology of Number it is believed that a special want is supplied. There is no subject taught in the elementary schools that taxes the teacher's resources as to methods and devices to a greater extent than arithmetic. There is no subject taught that is more dangerous to the pupil in the way of deadening his mind and arresting its development, if bad methods are used. The mechanical side of training must be joined to the intellectual in such a form as to prevent the fixing of the mind in thoughtless habits. While the mere processes become mechanical, the mind should by ever-deepening insight continually increase its power to grasp details in more extensive combina

tions.

Methods must be chosen and justified, if they can be justified at all, on psychological grounds. The concept of number will at first be grasped by the pupil imperfectly. He will see some phases of it and neglect others. Later on he will arrive at operations which demand a view of all that number implies. Each and every number is. an implied ratio, but it does not express the ratio as simple number. The German language is fortunate in having terms that express the two aspects of numerical quantity. Anzahl expresses the

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