登陆注册
19902100000030

第30章

Indeed, is it not true that the natural rights of this philosophy梩he right to personal freedom, the right to labor, the right to property, the right to open competition 梐re ideals which in reality sprang then as they do now largely from what the philosophers knew of the activities of men in small, face-to-face groups ?

The reluctance to give up ideals like those of the Declaration of Independence, without something equally simple and human to take their place, is healthy and need not look far for theoretical justification.

The idea of the germinal character of primary association is one that is fast making its way in education and philanthropy.As we learn that man is altogether social and never seen truly except in connection with his fellows, we fix our attention more and more on group conditions as the source, for better or worse, of personal character, and come to feel that we must work on the individual through the web of relations in which he actually lives.

The school, for instance, must form a whole with the rest of life, using the ideas generated by the latter as the starting-point of its training.

The public opinion and traditions of the scholars must be respected and made an ally of discipline.Children's associations shquld be fostered and good objects suggested for their activity.

In philanthropy it is essential that the unity of the family be regarded and its natural bonds not weakened for the sake of transient benefit to the individual.Children, especially, must be protected from the destructive kindness which inculcates irresponsibility in the parent.In general the heart of reform is in control of the conditions which act upon the family and neighborhood.When the housing, for example, is of such a character as to make a healthy home life impossible, the boys and girls are driven to the streets, the men into saloons, and thus society is diseased at its source.

Without healthy play, especially group play, human nature cannot rightly develop, and to preserve this, in the midst of the crowding and aggressive commercialism of our cities, is coming to be seen as a special need of the time.Democracy, it is now held, must recognize as one of its essential functions the provision of ample spaces and apparatus for this purpose, with enough judicious supervision to ensure the ascendancy of good play traditions.And with this must go the suppression of child labor and other inhumane conditions.

Fruitful attention is being given to boys' fellowships or "gangs." It appears梐s any one who recalls his own boyhood might have anticipated梩hat nearly all the juvenile population belong to such fellowships, and put an ardent, though often misdirected, idealism into them." Almost every boy in the tenement-house quarters of the district," says Robert A.Woods, speaking of Boston, "is a member of a gang.The boy who does not belong is not only the exception but the very rare exception." In crowded neighborhoods, where there are no playgrounds and street sports are unlawful, the human nature of these gangs must take a semi-criminal direction; but with better opportunities and guidance it turns quite as naturally to wholesome sport and social service.Accordingly social settlements and similar agencies are converting gangs into clubs, with the best results; and there is also coming to be a regular organization of voluntary clubs in affiliation with the public schools.

It is much the same in the country.In every village and township in the laud, I suppose, there are one or more groups of predatory boys and hoydenish girls whose mischief is only the result of ill-directed energy.

If each of these could receive a little sympathetic attention from kindred but wiser spirits, at least half of the crime and vice of the next generation would almost certainly be done away with.

Endnotes Thoreau, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, 283.Charities and the Commons, Aug.3, 1907.Antica lupa, Che piu che tutte l'altre bestie hai preda.Purgatorio, xx, 10.1 Samuel, 15: 33.Vol.i, 540 ff.The City Wilderness, 116.Boys' Self-Governing Clubs, 4, 5.Charities and the Commons, Aug.3, 1907, abridged.John Graham Brooks, The Social Unrest, 135.The City Wilderness, 113.

同类推荐
  • 太上灵宝首入净明四规明鉴经

    太上灵宝首入净明四规明鉴经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • A Discourse on Method

    A Discourse on Method

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蕉窗雨话

    蕉窗雨话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 医学启源

    医学启源

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • On the Soul

    On the Soul

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 少年易烊千玺

    少年易烊千玺

    大家好,我是一名千纸鹤!这本书的主角是易烊千玺!当然,王俊凯和王源也会出现。而且,王俊凯和王源的女主角还没订,你们可以在评论区评论自己想做王源还是王俊凯的女主角,我会公布答案。因为他们两个的女主角到后来才出现!如果写的不好,或者有什么建议告诉我,qq:2436519765验证消息:时光如水,答案:总是无言。还有,作者是学习党,所以更的慢,请见谅,谢谢!
  • 枕上晨钟

    枕上晨钟

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 查理九世之冰火九重天

    查理九世之冰火九重天

    墨多多他们闲着没事干,殊不知,他们的好朋友亚瑟面临着极大的危险,他们将展开什么样的历险呢?
  • 武者非侠

    武者非侠

    我怀念的,是两肋插刀;我骄傲的,是挥汗如雨;我歌颂的,是江湖。
  • 十六国演义

    十六国演义

    三百年恢弘历史;热血沸腾,刀光剑影;爱恨情仇,忠义仁孝;跌倒起伏,风云聚会,精彩不亚玄幻,刺激不差穿越。精彩的感官享受,壮阔的历史再现。
  • 风云女相

    风云女相

    女孩苏墨婷经过风雨成为一代女相,她哭过,恨过,痛过,但最终走向了成功
  • 天妃娘妈传

    天妃娘妈传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 有个王爷非要娶我

    有个王爷非要娶我

    从最弱的皇子,一步一步登上至尊帝位,他用了八年。从最强的家族,一步一步沦落家徒四壁,她也用了八年。八年的倾心相付,八年的竭尽全力,为了楚昭文这个男人耗尽了一切。可到头来她却输得彻底,如今再世为人,她势要讨回一切!但这眼下发生的这一切究竟是怎么回事?她这次回来,究竟该报恩,还是报仇?
  • 青霄玉女

    青霄玉女

    柳条结成的鞋子在她脚上化得全无,一双莹白如玉的小脚又踏在松软泥土里,她呆呆地望着,芙蓉般的俏脸上尽是清愁。她只是还不知,霜雪之神,亦是地神,离了大地,便如失了仙魂。然而她这一世里,当时残霜,或许才是最美的一段时光。书友QQ群:613501746
  • 荣药嫡女

    荣药嫡女

    墨悠然表示,她吃个酸辣粉被辣椒呛了下,就穿越到这坑爹的古代,面对妹控的厉害的哥哥,溺爱过度的便宜爹娘,好吧,暂且承认这穿越福利还是八错,但是那位王爷,你不能仗我无敌的医术就巴着我不放吧。。。~~