Back To The Basics: The Educational Teachings Of John Comenius

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I’ve recently learned something about the theories and works of a little-known philosopher and educationalist named John Comenius (1592-1670).  He was a Czech cleric perhaps best remembered for his progressive theories on universal education.  Some exposure to his ideas made me realize just how out of focus the educational system is here in the United States.

In Comenius’s time, illiteracy was the rule in perhaps a majority of Europeans.  He spent decades traveling around Europe to promote educational reform, and to attempt to bring the art of instruction in line with modern realities.

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“Do What I Say, Not What I Do”

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We live in times where our “leaders” at the top lecture us on duty and responsibility, yet aggregate to themselves a larger and larger portion of the pie.  They grow fat on your labor, and on your backs; and yet you have very little to call your own.

And in their spare time, they sweep away our cultural inheritance to make way for corrupting entertainments, distracting amusements, and intoxicating spectacles that offer nothing in the way of meaningful value.  We see this as the lesson of the great film Harakiri (1962).  It is one of the great samurai films, and a powerful indictment of institutional hypocrisy.

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Stephen Mitchell’s “The Iliad”

I like to listen to audiobooks when driving around.  News doesn’t interest me as much as in years past, and I can get what I want from websites.

I recently rented Stephen Mitchell’s new translation of The Iliad from my city’s library, thinking I would give the old tale another chance.  I had read bits and pieces of it in years past, but it had never seized my imagination.  But tastes change, and our perspectives change with our own life experiences, and it is good to give some things a second look.

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Delusion Is The Enemy Of Precision

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I’m not a big Sherlock Holmes fan.  Some of the stories are amusing, but I never really warmed to the character.  (I do like Arthur Conan Doyle’s science fiction and suspense stories, but that’s a separate conversation).

Anyway, about Sherlock Holmes.  He used to have a saying that “Passion was the enemy of precision.”  And it can be, certainly.

But other things are enemies of precision, too.  One of them is more insidious than passion.  It is delusion.

What is delusion?

Delusion is the failure or inability to see the reality that is before our eyes.  Delusion is the blocking out of information that does not conform to our pre-existing beliefs.

Delusion is all to common.  It can be a killer.

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Beauty Seeks Beauty, And Ugly Seeks Ugly

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Essayist and Japan observer Alex Kerr wrote a very perceptive collection of essays on Japanese culture and his experiences with it.  The book was released in the 1990s and was called Lost Japan.  I admire the book very much.  The essays in the book are unified by one theme:  his quest for the hidden beauty of things.

One of the many engaging stories he told in the book was how he (basically accidentally) got into art collecting.  He noticed that many Japanese antiquities were undervalued and underpriced.  So he bought a few of them.

And then he bought more of them.

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Adding Much-Needed Variety To Your Fitness Routine

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Everyone knows that physical fitness is crucial.  It is the bedrock that supports the other activities of the body and the mind.  But it’s often necessary to change things up a little.  It’s too easy to slip into a rut, to fall into a trap of feeling that we’re well-rounded, when we may not be.

And that’s something I see a lot of.

I see a lot of guys focusing too much on one thing, to the detriment of the big picture.  I’m seeing too much focus on weightlifting, and not enough focus on all-around fitness.

Remember that it’s all-around fitness that matters.

Don’t get me wrong.  I love weightlifting and firmly believe that it should be one of your foundations.  But other things matter, too.  And it’s easy to slip into the self-delusion that you’re in shape just because your biceps or pecs look good with a tight t-shirt on.  Some of these guys are laughable.

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7 Reasons Why You’re Not Reaching Your Foreign Language Learning Goals

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Language acquisition and learning are subjects that I’m interested in.

Over the years, I’ve worked very hard to acquire knowledge a detailed knowledge several foreign languages.  I’ve lived in several countries, and have never had a problem conversing in the local language.  And I’m not just talking about rattling off a few survival phrases, either.

Those who have read Thirty-Seven and Pantheon know that I sometimes like to use original quotes from great authors, translated by me, to help make a point.  I don’t rely on filters, buffers, or other “interpretations” of the great thinkers.  (Thirty-Seven also contains two chapters of detailed suggestions on foreign language learning).

I go right to the original sources.  With no filter or buffer.

Not many people know how to do this.  But I want to share what I’ve learned over the years, because I know that someone out there is struggling with the same things that I used to struggle with.

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Ruthless: A Memoir By Jerry Heller

[My article this week at Return of Kings is about my impressions from reading Jerry Heller’s 2006 book Ruthless: A Memoir.  It’s a fascinating journey into the world of N.W.A., the seminal rap group that became a sensation in the late 1980s and early 1990s.]

I still remember the time I first listened to N.W.A.’s Straight Outta Compton. I was in college, and a friend of mine had dubbed a tape for me and said, “Man, you need to check this out.” So I brought it back to my dorm room and let it rip. I couldn’t believe they were saying the things they were saying; no one had ever cursed like that on a record before, or spun such violent fantasies.

The attraction of the music for white kids like me with no experiences in the inner city was this: it was angry, rebellious, and somehow bizarrely life-affirming in its exuberance. In 2015, this type of music is no big deal any more. But in 1988, it was incendiary.

When I heard last month that a movie was being made about the formation of N.W.A., I decided to read Jerry Heller’s 2006 book Ruthless: A Memoir. Heller was the co-founder and producer of Ruthless Records (N.W.A.’s label), and I had been dimly aware of the various back-and-forth accusations that had been tied to the drama of N.W.A.’s breakup. What were the roles of Dr. Dre and Ice Cube? Who had screwed over whom? Where did the blame properly lie?

[To read the rest of the article, click here].

The Positive And Negative Power Of Humiliation

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In our perpetual quest for mastery over ourselves and our environment, we are often reminded that life can deal us hardships.  The Chinese peasant has been wont to say that he must get used to “eating bitterness.” But what if there were a way to turn this to our advantage? What if there were a way to harness the power of humiliation, so to speak, and channel this negative energy into something good?

Humiliations for some people serve as impetus to higher achievement.  For others, they can undermine confidence and erode a positive outlook.  This truism is illustrated in the life and career of the Arabic grammarian Sibawayhi (c. 760-796).  He is considered the first, and some say the greatest, of the medieval scholars of the Arabic language.

When Arabic spread out over a wide geographic area after the seventh century, it came to be adopted by a large number of cultures and nations who had had no exposure to it.  There was a pressing need for a proper understanding of how to read texts, since Arabic—like other Semitic languages, such as Hebrew—is normally written without letters for vowels.  Proper care for the nuances of the classical language plays a large role in Arabic linguistics.

His full name was Abu Bishr Amr ibn Uthman ibn Qanbar, but this mouthful was mercifully shortened by the nickname of Sibawayhi.  He was an ethnic Persian, born in the city of Hamadan, and not an Arab; his father had been a convert to Islam.  Some historians say he was given the nickname “Sibawayhi” (which means “smell of apples” in Persian) because his breath had a pleasant odor.  His native language was Persian, and he always spoke Arabic with a heavy Persian accent.

This fact was later to play a significant role in his life, as we will see.

Sibawayhi’s original intention had been to study jurisprudence in Basra.  But a humiliating event occurred there that changed the course of his life.  We are told that he was conversing with a group of Arabs, and they began to make fun of his accent.  Angered and humiliated, he responded by telling them that “one day, I will teach you Arabic.”

So he switched the focus of his studies from law to grammar.  The humiliation that he had suffered at the hands of his peers spurred him on to greater achievement.  He eventually went on to produce the first compendium of Arabic linguistics, which tradition has simply given the name “the book” or الكتاب .

So Sibawayhi was able to turn his humiliation into something productive.  His compendium of grammar deals with a vast amount of linguistic detail:  verbal objects, infinitives, topics of sentences, cases and case endings, particles, broken plurals, morphology, syntax, and various recondite phonetic matters.   But it is also a book of literature, in the sense that it is filled with anecdotes and quotations from other authorities.

But, like so many things in life, what had been the source of his elevation also was a factor in his undoing.  While he permitted humiliation to motivate him to great effort, he allowed it to upset his serenity.  The story may be apocryphal, but we cannot be sure.

Around 793, at the court of the caliph in Baghdad, a rival grammarian named al-Kisa’i challenged Sibawayhi to a contest of knowledge involving an abstruse proposition in grammar.  The issue was the correct construction of the last few words of this sentence:

قالت العرب: قد كُنْتُ أَظُنُّ أنَّ الْعَقْرَبَ أَشَدُّ لَسْعَةَ من الزُّنْبُوْرِ فَإِذَا هُوَ هِيَ أو فَإِذَا هُوَ إِيَاهَا

I translate this sentence as:  “The Arabs say:  I used to think that a scorpion’s sting hurts more than a hornet’s, but they were the same.”

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The question that al-Kisa’i put to Sibawayhi was this:  should the last three words of the sentence above (فَإِذَا هُوَ إِيَاهَا) be written as it is written above, or should it read: فَإذَا هُوَ هِيَ ?

Or, if we transliterate into English, should the last three words be “fa’idha huwwa iyaha” or “fa’idha huwwa hiyya?”  Or are both constructions correct?

Sibawayhi’s answer was that the first construction listed above was the only correct one.  When some Bedouin Arabs (who were considered the finest of native speakers) in the audience heard this, they contradicted Sibawayhi.  Tradition tells us, however, that they had actually been bribed by al-Kisa’i to contradict Sibawayhi, and that both formations are equally valid.

Regardless, Sibawayhi was again humiliated, and this time it embittered him.  For all his intellectual abilities and commanding mastery of the Arabic language, he had been unable to exert mastery over himself.  He left Baghdad for Persia, and died in Shiraz around 796, apparently of some ailment.  His tomb can still be seen in Shiraz today.

Humiliations can both make us, or break us.  It is up to us to decide which of these outcomes will have the most lasting effect on our consciences.  With proper control of the passions and emotions, it is possible to turn the negative experience of humiliation into something that is a benefit.

 

Read More:  Making Mead The Roman Way

Talent Applied Consistently Is Never Wasted

The following parable is found in Aulus Gellius (XVI.19), who himself takes it from Herodotus (I.23).  It reminds us that effort and talent, if applied consistently, will eventually reap rewards.

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