The modern boy and girl are certainly taught more
subjects--but does that always mean that they actually know more?
Has it ever struck you as odd, or unfortunate, that today,
when the proportion of literacy throughout Western Europe is higher than it has
ever been, people should have become susceptible to the influence of
advertisement and mass propaganda to an extent hitherto unheard of and
unimagined? Do you put this down to the mere mechanical fact that the press and
the radio and so on have made propaganda much easier to distribute over a wide
area? Or do you sometimes have an uneasy suspicion that the product of modern
educational methods is less good than he or she might be at disentangling fact
from opinion and the proven from the plausible?
Have you ever, in listening to a debate among adult and
presumably responsible people, been fretted by the extraordinary inability of
the average debater to speak to the question, or to meet and refute the
arguments of speakers on the other side? Or have you ever pondered upon the
extremely high incidence of irrelevant matter which crops up at committee
meetings, and upon the very great rarity of persons capable of acting as
chairmen of committees? And when you think of this, and think that most of our
public affairs are settled by debates and committees, have you ever felt a
certain sinking of the heart?
Have you ever followed a discussion in the newspapers or
elsewhere and noticed how frequently writers fail to define the terms they use?
Or how often, if one man does define his terms, another will assume in his
reply that he was using the terms in precisely the opposite sense to that in
which he has already defined them? Have you ever been faintly troubled by the
amount of slipshod syntax going about? And, if so, are you troubled because it
is inelegant or because it may lead to dangerous misunderstanding?
Do you ever find that young people, when they have left
school, not only forget most of what they have learnt (that is only to be
expected), but forget also, or betray that they have never really known, how to
tackle a new subject for themselves? Are you often bothered by coming across
grown-up men and women who seem unable to distinguish between a book that is
sound, scholarly, and properly documented, and one that is, to any trained eye,
very conspicuously none of these things? Or who cannot handle a library
catalogue? Or who, when faced with a book of reference, betray a curious
inability to extract from it the passages relevant to the particular question
which interests them?
Do you often come across people for whom, all their lives, a
"subject" remains a "subject," divided by watertight
bulkheads from all other "subjects," so that they experience very
great difficulty in making an immediate mental connection between let us say,
algebra and detective fiction, sewage disposal and the price of salmon--or,
more generally, between such spheres of knowledge as philosophy and economics,
or chemistry and art?
-- The Lost Tools of Learning, 1947 Dorothy Sayers
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