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<title>'Plan of Education, for a young Prince' (part 1), from "Fog's Weekly Journal", No. 195</title>
<author xml:id="auth"><persName key="nameid_14" sort="Ramsay, Andrew Michael" ref="nameid_14" evidence="external" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml">Andrew Michael Ramsay</persName></author>

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<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>2006</date>
<publisher>Newton Project, Imperial College</publisher>
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<note type="metadataLine">29 July 1732, in English, <hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 2,020 words, 1p.</note>
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<p>Published in <hi rend="italic">Fog's Weekly Journal</hi> No. 195.</p>
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<p>Includes reflections on Newtonian natural philosophy and its place in the educational scheme.</p>
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<note n="pages">1p.</note>
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<p>in English</p>
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<linkGrp n="document_relations" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/normalized/"><ptr type="parent" target="THEM00028">Keynes Ms. 129</ptr><ptr type="previous_part" target="OTHE00003">Letter reacting to Newton's death, from "Mist's Weekly Journal", No. 103 [Keynes Ms. 129.13]</ptr></linkGrp>
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<bibl><note><p>The promised second part of the essay is not included in Conduitt's collection of cuttings.</p></note></bibl>
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<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par1">The following Essay is written by the Author of the <lb xml:id="l1"/>Travels of <hi rend="italic">Cyrus,</hi> and has never yet been made Publick. – <lb xml:id="l2"/>It has been put into our Hands by the Author's Consent, <lb xml:id="l3"/>and we flatter ourselves, it will prove no disagreeable Enter<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l4"/>tainment to the Publick.</p>
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<head rend="center" xml:id="hd1">PLAN <hi rend="italic">of</hi> EDUCATION, <hi rend="italic">for a young Prince.</hi></head>
<p rend="indent0" xml:id="par2"><hi rend="dropCap">I</hi>N  the present State of human Nature, all <lb xml:id="l5"/>our Faculties are weakened and obscur'd, <lb xml:id="l6"/>our Understanding is over-clouded with Ignorance and Error, our Imagination <lb xml:id="l7"/>clogg'd with gross and groveling Ideas, <lb xml:id="l8"/>our Will biass'd by strong and turbulent <lb xml:id="l9"/>Passions. True Education is the Art of <lb xml:id="l10"/>curing these Diseases of the Mind, so as to restore in some <lb xml:id="l11"/>Degree our decay'd Faculties to their primitive Vigour. <lb xml:id="l12"/>'Tis then that the Understanding discovers great and Noble <lb xml:id="l13"/>Truths, that the Imagination Paints them forth in a Thou<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l14"/>sand agreeable Shapes, that the Heart attaches itself to them, <lb xml:id="l15"/>and becomes amiable in loving them. Thus we reinstall <lb xml:id="l16"/>in their different Functions the <hi rend="italic">Philosopher</hi>, the <hi rend="italic">Painter</hi> and <lb xml:id="l17"/>the <hi rend="italic">Lover</hi>, of which our Spiritual Nature seems to be com<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l18"/>posed. The principal End then of all Publick and Private <lb xml:id="l19"/>Instruction should be to strengthen the Judgement, to wing <lb xml:id="l20"/>the Fancy, and to purify the Heart.</p>
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<head rend="center" xml:id="hd2">I. <hi rend="italic">Of the Understanding.</hi></head>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par3">The Custom of Publick Schools has prevail'd so much, <lb xml:id="l21"/>and succeeded so well, that it were imprudent and even dan<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l22"/>gerous to attack the Methods there us'd of employing the <lb xml:id="l23"/>first Years of our tender Age in acquiring Languages. The <lb xml:id="l24"/>Wisdom of the Ancients is no doubt best Learned, when <lb xml:id="l25"/>they are read in their own Tongue, and all Translations <lb xml:id="l26"/>serve only to degrade them. An exact Knowledge of <hi rend="italic">Greek</hi> <lb xml:id="l27"/>and <hi rend="italic">Latin</hi> are therefore the Foundations of all true Learning. <lb xml:id="l28"/>But since youthful Minds are capable very early of Reason <lb xml:id="l29"/>and Comparison, I believe, that to neglect the Improve<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l30"/>ment of the Understanding, in order to cultivate the Imagi<lb xml:id="l31"/>nation and Memory, is to lay the Foundations of a false and <lb xml:id="l32"/>superficial Knowledge. Hence it is that Men of polite <lb xml:id="l33"/>Learning only, are seldom Men of a profound Genius. They can unriddle the Grammatical Intricacies of <hi rend="italic">Pindar</hi> <lb xml:id="l34"/>and <hi rend="italic">Persius</hi>, yea perhaps show with Elegance and Taste <lb xml:id="l35"/>the different Beauties of <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Virgil</hi>; but then they <lb xml:id="l36"/>have no Relish of Truth, they can neither rise up to first <lb xml:id="l37"/>Principles, nor descend to Consequences, nor pursue a con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l38"/>tinued Chain of Ideas, thro' all its various Links and <lb xml:id="l39"/>Windings.</p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par4">I humbly therefore conceive, that it is a very great Fault, <lb xml:id="l40"/>not to awaken early the Activities of the Mind in Children, <lb xml:id="l41"/>in order to strengthen their intellectual Powers. The fol<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l42"/>lowing Plan is what I would propose for the Education of <lb xml:id="l43"/>a Prince, who may one Day govern a Nation whose Ge<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l44"/>nius is equally proper for Learning and War, and who loves <lb xml:id="l45"/>a King that can direct its Councils by his Wisdom as well <lb xml:id="l46"/>as defend its Interest by his Courage.</p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par5">After a tolerable Knowledge of <hi rend="italic">Greek</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Latin,</hi> 'tis fit <lb xml:id="l47"/>to begin with the Study of Mathematicks, because these <lb xml:id="l48"/>Sciences habituate the Understanding by Degrees to Pene<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l49"/>tration, Depth, and Attention, which enable it at length to <lb xml:id="l50"/>reason closely, clearly, and strongly upon every thing that <lb xml:id="l51"/>becomes an Object of its Reflection. The first five Books <lb xml:id="l52"/>of <hi rend="italic">Euclid</hi>'s Elements are the best Foundations of all Mathe<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l53"/>matical Learning. The Ancients had a wonderful Know<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l54"/>ledge of human Nature, they saw the Extent and Bounds <lb xml:id="l55"/>of our Understanding, the gradual and slow Steps that were <lb xml:id="l56"/>to be made at first in these abstracted Sciences, till the Mind <lb xml:id="l57"/>accustom'd to a Train of successive Reasonings begin to <lb xml:id="l58"/>enlarge its Faculties, extend its Views, and accelerate its <lb xml:id="l59"/>Pace. After that the Pupil has laid in a sufficient Stock of <lb xml:id="l60"/>Geometrical Principles, the Tutor should proceed to give <lb xml:id="l61"/>him some Taste of Algebra, Fluxions and the Doctrine of <lb xml:id="l62"/>Curves. Great Care however is to be taken not to perplex <lb xml:id="l63"/>and exhaust the Force of youthful Minds by those nice and <lb xml:id="l64"/>quaint Speculations, because if Caution be not us'd they are <lb xml:id="l65"/>as dangerous in Mathematicks as the Refinements of the <lb xml:id="l66"/>Schoolmen were in Philosophy. So soon, therefore, as the <lb xml:id="l67"/>young Prince is sufficiently initiated into these Misteries of <lb xml:id="l68"/>the sublimer Geometry, he must be taught to apply all to <lb xml:id="l69"/>the Knowledge of Nature and its Operations.</p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par6">The skilful Tutor must begin by showing his Pupil the <lb xml:id="l70"/>wise Institution of the first Laws of Motion, how they are <lb xml:id="l71"/>the voluntary Establishments of an Intelligent Cause, and <lb xml:id="l72"/>not the necessary Effects of a blind Force. He may then <lb xml:id="l73"/>proceed to a general Survey of the Principal Secrets and beau<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l74"/>tiful Discoveries of Natural and Experimental Philosophy, <lb xml:id="l75"/>wander over our Globe with Pleasure, and discover the <lb xml:id="l76"/>Causes of the great Phenomena that appear on the Earth, in <lb xml:id="l77"/>the Air, and among the celestial Bodies. Here the Mind <lb xml:id="l78"/>begins to taste the Fruits of all its laborious, abstracted Spe<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l79"/>culations, and to perceive how the sublimer Geometry con<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l80"/>tributes to explain the celestial and terrestrial Appearances <lb xml:id="l81"/>according to the Principles of the great Sir <hi rend="italic">Isaac Newton</hi>. <lb xml:id="l82"/>These Principles may be reduc'd to a few Propositions, all <lb xml:id="l83"/>the rest are but fine Silk-webs spun from the prolifick Brain <lb xml:id="l84"/>of that surprizing Genius, or perhaps Defects of Method, <lb xml:id="l85"/>Perspicuity and Elegance, which the most Part of profound <lb xml:id="l86"/>Men seldom or never apply themselves to.</p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par7">To prevent the Mind's being absorpt in these Specula<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l87"/>tions, and to detach it from an over-weaning Opinion of its <lb xml:id="l88"/>own Abilities, the following Principles are to be taught. <lb xml:id="l89"/>1. That the Creation is but an Image or Picture of the <lb xml:id="l90"/>divine Perfections, and therefore bears a Character of his <lb xml:id="l91"/>Infinity and Immensity. That this small Part of it which <lb xml:id="l92"/>we inhabit is but a Point in Comparison of the Solar System; <lb xml:id="l93"/>that the Solar System is but a Point in Comparison of the <lb xml:id="l94"/>vast Spaces discover'd in the Regions of the fixt Stars; <lb xml:id="l95"/>that these superior Regions themselves are but a Point in <lb xml:id="l96"/>Comparison of the innumerable Worlds that lye perhaps <lb xml:id="l97"/>hid in the Bosom of Immensity. 2. That in this Point which <lb xml:id="l98"/>we inhabit, we know only some superficial Qualities and <lb xml:id="l99"/>Properties of Nature in so far as is necessary for our pre<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l100"/>sent State, Conduct and Uses. That, as Sir <hi rend="italic">Isaac Newton</hi> <lb xml:id="l101"/>said, all the Discoveries Mortals can make are like those of a <lb xml:id="l102"/>Child upon the Borders of the Sea, that has only crack'd <lb xml:id="l103"/>some Pebbles and open'd some Shells to see what is in <lb xml:id="l104"/>them, while there lies beyond him a boundless Ocean of <lb xml:id="l105"/>which he has no Idea: That we can never be true Philo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l106"/>sophers till we see the Author of Nature Face to Face, <lb xml:id="l107"/>compare the Pictures with their Original, and know by <lb xml:id="l108"/>direct Intuition their mutual Relations and Resemblances, <lb xml:id="l109"/>all which are the Privileges only of pure Intelligences dis<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l110"/>engag'd from Matter 3. That the Cause of Attraction <lb xml:id="l111"/>and all the other wonderful Phenomena of Nature depend <lb xml:id="l112"/>upon the Action of an ethereal Fluid that pervades all Things: <lb xml:id="l113"/>That as the infinite Spirit, present every where, acts upon <lb xml:id="l114"/>all intelligent Natures, and gives them at once both Being <lb xml:id="l115"/>and Well-being, so this ethereal Fluid is like the Sensori<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l116"/>um of the Deity, by which he acts upon all material Beings <lb xml:id="l117"/>as our Body is the Medium by which our Soul acts on all <lb xml:id="l118"/>Objects that surround us. This seems to be the true Mean<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l119"/>ing of the Orientals, the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Pythagoricians</hi>, when <lb xml:id="l120"/>they consider'd the Divinity as the Soul of the World, and <lb xml:id="l121"/>this ethereal Fluid, purer than Light itself, as the Body of <lb xml:id="l122"/>God.</p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par8">By these great Ideas the Mind will be elevated and dilated, <lb xml:id="l123"/>and at the same Time preserv'd from that little Vanity <lb xml:id="l124"/>which puffs up vulgar Souls. It will despise all these ima<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l125"/>ginary, dark and impious Systems that tend to explain Nature <lb xml:id="l126"/>by blind mechanical Springs, without the continual Influ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l127"/>ence and Action of a sovereign intelligent Cause: And in <lb xml:id="l128"/>fine, it will look upon this Ball of Clay as a Prison, <lb xml:id="l129"/>conceive a noble Indifference for Life, be inspir'd with high <lb xml:id="l130"/>Thoughts of Immortality, and chearfully submit to the <lb xml:id="l131"/>Decrees of Heaven when Death comes to disingage us from <lb xml:id="l132"/>the Entanglements of Matter and Sense.</p>
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<head rend="center" xml:id="hd3">II. <hi rend="italic">Of Imagination</hi></head>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par9">While the Reason is thus cultivated and improv'd, the <lb xml:id="l133"/>Sciences that depend upon Imagination ought not to be <lb xml:id="l134"/>neglected. The pleasing Images of Poetry, the agreeable <lb xml:id="l135"/>Fictions of Mythology, the pathetick Discourses of Elo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l136"/>quence, serve to amuse youthful Minds, enliven their Fancy, <lb xml:id="l137"/>and to polish the Taste. In reading with them <hi rend="italic">Homer</hi> and <lb xml:id="l138"/><hi rend="italic">Virgil, Sophocles</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Terence, Demosthenes</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Cicero, Ana<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l139"/>creon</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Horace,</hi> they should be taught the masculine <lb xml:id="l140"/>Strokes and the finer Shades of the <hi rend="italic">Grecian</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Roman</hi> Paint<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l141"/>ings, the different Genius and Ornaments of Prose and Verse, <lb xml:id="l142"/>the Nature, Rules and various Characters of Epick, Dra<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l143"/>matick, and Lyrick Compositions. By all these the Pupil <lb xml:id="l144"/>will learn, that the true Foundations of Style are strong <lb xml:id="l145"/>Thoughts, noble Sentiments and lucid Order; that no <lb xml:id="l146"/>Images are to be allow'd but what are natural, and proper <lb xml:id="l147"/>to each Subject; that all false Delicacies, affected Antitheses, <lb xml:id="l148"/>Epigrammick Points, and <hi rend="italic">Italian</hi> Conceits, are to be avoid<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l149"/>ed in the true Sublime. He must first Think, then Feel, <lb xml:id="l150"/>and Words will naturally follow.</p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par10">The Studies, however, of Poetry, Mythology, and An<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l151"/>tiquity, must be carry'd much higher than what is done <lb xml:id="l152"/>ordinarily in the Schools. In reading the Poets and Classical <lb xml:id="l153"/>Authors, the Prince must be taught to discover in them the <lb xml:id="l154"/>great Principles of Theology and Morality, that are oft hid <lb xml:id="l155"/>under the Allegories and Fictions of the Ancients, according <lb xml:id="l156"/>to the Principles of <hi rend="italic">Pythagorean</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Platonick</hi> Philosophy, <lb xml:id="l157"/>which are as follows. 1. That the supreme and eternal <lb xml:id="l158"/>Mind has produc'd numberless Orders of intelligent Natures <lb xml:id="l159"/>which replenish all the boundless Regions of Immensity: <lb xml:id="l160"/>That Moral and Physical Evil can't be the first Production <lb xml:id="l161"/>of the sovereign Good; that therefore all Beings were at <lb xml:id="l162"/>first created in a State of Purity and Happiness, which is <lb xml:id="l163"/>call'd by the Orientals, the <hi rend="italic">Egyptians</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Greeks</hi>, the <lb xml:id="l164"/>Reign of <hi rend="italic">Oromosis, Osiris,</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Saturn,</hi> or the Golden Age. <lb xml:id="l165"/>2. That a certain Portion of these Spirits fell from their <lb xml:id="l166"/>Original Purity, and were condemn'd to inhabit mortal <lb xml:id="l167"/>Bodies, the Frame of Nature was alter'd in the little Orb <lb xml:id="l168"/>which they inhabit, and they were subjected to Physical <lb xml:id="l169"/>Evil and Sufferings to punish and purify them from their moral Corruption. This State is call'd by the Ancients the <lb xml:id="l170"/>Reign of <hi rend="italic">Arimanius, Typhon,</hi> and the <hi rend="italic">Iron Age.</hi> 3. That <lb xml:id="l171"/>at length these degenerate Beings will be restor'd to their <lb xml:id="l172"/>primitive Perfection and Happiness, call'd the Restoration <lb xml:id="l173"/>of the Golden Age, and the Reign of <hi rend="italic">Astrea</hi></p>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par11">Upon these great Ideas depend all the Fictions of My<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l174"/>thology, and prepare the Mind to relish the nobler and su<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l175"/>blimer Doctrines of Christianity. Can any one observe the <lb xml:id="l176"/>profound Genius discover'd in the Ancients, the Sublimity <lb xml:id="l177"/>of their Geometers, the Sagacity of their Historians, the <lb xml:id="l178"/>noble Morality found in their Philosophers, and imagine they <lb xml:id="l179"/>understood, in a literal Sense, all they say of their Gods and <lb xml:id="l180"/>Goddesses? The present Contempt of reveal'd Religion <lb xml:id="l181"/>comes for the most Part from confounding the pure, ge<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l182"/>nuine, original Doctrines with the vain Speculations and <lb xml:id="l183"/>Glosses of the Schoolmen. As the Heathen Poets and Phi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l184"/>losophers degenerated by Degrees from the true Theology, <lb xml:id="l185"/>so have the Christian Divines of all Communions departed <lb xml:id="l186"/>in many Things from the true Spirit of Religion.</p>
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<head rend="center" xml:id="hd4">III. <hi rend="italic">Of the Heart.</hi></head>
<p rend="indent5" xml:id="par12">While the Understanding and the Imagination are thus <lb xml:id="l187"/>strengthen'd and polish'd by a due Mixture of philosophical <lb xml:id="l188"/>and classical Learning, the Morals are to be perfected, and <lb xml:id="l189"/>such Sciences taught as give us a true Knowledge of God, <lb xml:id="l190"/>of ourselves, and our Fellow-Creatures. 1. The Study <lb xml:id="l191"/>of Nature, and all the Marks of infinite Power, Wisdom, <lb xml:id="l192"/>and Goodness diffus'd thro' the Universe, give us a great <lb xml:id="l193"/>Idea of its Author. By these we discover, according to the <lb xml:id="l194"/>Expression of the Ancients, the infinite Skill of the first and <lb xml:id="l195"/>sovereign Geometer, who created and dispos'd all Things <lb xml:id="l196"/>with Order, Measure, and Proportion. This is the Use that <lb xml:id="l197"/>is to be made of Mathematicks and Natural Philosophy.</p>
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<p rend="indent10" xml:id="par13">[<hi rend="italic">The Remainder of this in our next.</hi>]</p>
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