| John Locke, George Berkeley, David Hume - 1910 - 460 halaman
...oppression and cruelty? § 118. Curiosity in children (which I had occasion just to mention § 108) is but an appetite after knowledge; and therefore ought to...it active and busy, are, I suppose, these following : I. Not to check or discountenance any enquiries he shall make, nor suffer them to be laugh'd at;... | |
| John Locke - 1912 - 292 halaman
...118.1 Curiosity. — Curiosity in children (which 1 had occasion just to mention, section 108) is but an appetite after knowledge, and therefore ought to...creatures. The ways to encourage it, and keep it active and vigorous, are, I suppose, these following : 1. Not to check or discountenance any inquiries he shall... | |
| John Locke - 1922 - 294 halaman
...118.1 Curiosity. — Curiosity in children (which I had occasion just to mention, section 108) is but an appetite after knowledge, and therefore ought to...creatures. The ways to encourage it, and keep it active and vigorous, are, I suppose, these following : 1. Not to check or discountenance any inquiries he shall... | |
| John Locke - 1927 - 640 halaman
...him require nothing but right management whereby to be made very useful. Curiosity in children is but an appetite after knowledge, and therefore ought to...nature has provided, to remove that ignorance they brought into the world with them, and which without this busy inquisitiveness would make them dull... | |
| Jocelyn Harris - 2003 - 288 halaman
...questioner' (151), often curious. Curiosity in children, says Locke, 'is but an Appetite after Knowledge ... the great Instrument Nature has provided, to remove...Ignorance they were born with; and which, without this busie Inquisitiveness, will make them dull and useless Creatures'. The tutor's task, then, is to answer... | |
| Jeffrey H. Goldstein - 1998 - 284 halaman
...also fuels development. John Locke had the wisdom to recognize that curiosity in children represents "an appetite after knowledge, and therefore ought...the great instrument nature has provided, to remove the ignorance they were born with, and which without this busy inquisitiveness will make them dull... | |
| Knud Haakonssen - 2006 - 668 halaman
...sect. 4, 220). The two elements are combined from childhood when the parent both encourages curiosity - 'the great Instrument Nature has provided, to remove that Ignorance, they were born with' — and responds to it with rational answers to the child's questions (Tlwitgltts, §118, 182-3). Such an education... | |
| John Locke - 1988 - 328 halaman
...§ 108.) is but an Appetite after Cur;asit Knowledge; and therefore ought to be encou- """f 2j raged in them, not only as a good Sign, but as the great...encourage it, and keep it active and busy, are, I 30 suppose, these following : 1. Not to check or discountenance any Enquiries he shall make, nor suffer... | |
| John Locke - 1886 - 320 halaman
...Appetite after ,, . ., IT- 11 t ' rt Curtos1ty. Knowledge; and therefore ought to be encou- 25 raged in them, not only as a good Sign, but as the great...encourage it, and keep it active and busy, are, I 30 suppose, these following : 1. Not to check or discountenance any Enquiries he shall make, nor suffer... | |
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