cover image: Indian Education

Premium

20.500.12592/3k46cd

Indian Education

1903

line of sight should be as nearly as possible at right angles to the horizontal direction of the writing that the actual style of the writing should be such as to impose the least fatigue on the eyes in following it and that the position of the hand should be such as to allow it and the fingers to move with the greatest possible ease that is; again with the minimum of fatigue. [...] Remembering that the normal easy position for the eyes is one in which the gaze is straight to the front and the eyes are both fixed on the object so that the distances from it to either eye are equal it will at once appear that if the head is inclined sideways there must be a strain on the eyes to allow of the different focal lengths and to accommodate the organs to the different angles at which [...] Arnold's intense earnestness of moral conviction showed itself in his treatment of history ; the study of the past was to him the study of God's dealings with the human race of the struggles between the good and evil ; and from this came his strong feeling of admiration for the noble characters of by-gone times and of reprobation and abhorrence of the base and the unprincipled."—Arnold of Rugby [...] This defect will be obviated : First by imitating a well-written essay where a new set of thoughts requires the beginning of a new paragraph ; Secondly in opposition to an essay by the use of appropriate abbreviations ; Thirdly by adopting the form of the syllogism in which the signs of equality of the conclusion and the minor stand exactly below the sign of equality of the major ; e.e. [...] The rich and the poor the strong and the weak the orthodox and the reformer the learned and the ignorant are equally amenable to the one or the other of these emergencies common to mankind as a whole." In return for the professional services of his fellow-members claimed gratis by a Frater the latter is bound to further the professional interests of the former by recommending them to his frie
education
Pages
85
Published in
United States
SARF Document ID
sarf.120008
Segment Pages Author Actions
Editorial
221-222 unknown view
Female Education in Bengal
222-225 W. Egerton view
The Teaching of Writing
226-229 unknown view
Historical Teaching in Colleges
230-233 unknown view
Education in England
233-237 unknown view
Some Errors in Matriculation Mathematics
237-238 unknown view
Public Instruction in Ceylon 1901
238-240 unknown view
Notes
240-242 unknown view
The Literary Fraternity Bombay
242-246 V.D. Kamat view
The News of the Month
247-252 unknown view
Correspondence
253-253 unknown view
Reviews of Books
253-257 Ennis Richmond view
Books Received
257-257 unknown view
Our Contemporaries
258-264 unknown view
Government Notifications
264-267 unknown view
Prize Competition
268-268 unknown view
Backmatter
i-xxviii unknown view

Related Topics

All