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McMurry, Charles Alexander, 1857-1929

"The Elements of General Method Based on the Principles of Herbart"

; in geography, continents, oceans, forms of
relief, kinds of climate and causes, occupations, products, commerce,
etc. The fundamental truths and relations and rules of arithmetic must
be developed from objects and illustrations. Reading, spelling, and
writing are arts, not sciences, and are more concerned with skill in
execution than with the acquisition of a body of scientific truths.
And yet certain general truths are emphasized and applied in these
studies.
Much needless confusion has been caused by raising the question _where
to begin_ in learning. Do we proceed from the whole, to the parts, or
from the parts to the whole? In making the acquaintance of sense
objects it seems clear that we first perceive wholes (somewhat vaguely
and indefinitely). The second impulse is to analyze this whole into
its parts, then recombine them (synthesis) into a whole which is more
definitely and fully grasped. A house, for example, is generally first
perceived as a whole; and later it is examined more particularly as to
its materials, rooms, stairways, conveniences, furnishings, etc. The
same is true with a mountain, a butterfly, a man. Thus far we have
proceeded from the whole to the parts and then back again; analysis and
synthesis.


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