Jean-Jacques Rousseau

"Education is either from nature, from man or from things. The developing of our faculties and organs is the education of nature; that of man is the application we learn to make of this very developing; and that of things is the experience we acquire in regard to the different objects by which we are affected. All that we have not at our birth, and that we stand in need of at the years of maturity, is the gift of education."

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Source: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Henry John Tozer, Derek Matravers (1997). “The Social Contract”, p.9, Wordsworth Editions

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Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Philosopher, Writer, Composer

Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a Swiss philosopher whose ideas on freedom and social contracts profoundly influenced modern political thought and education.

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Jean-Jacques Rousseau Philosopher, Writer, Composer

"The freedom of Mankind does not lie in the fact that can do what we want, but that we do not have to do that which we do not want."

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"Plants are shaped by cultivation and men by education. .. We are born weak, we need strength; we are born totally unprovided, we need aid; we are born stupid, we need judgment. Everything we do not have at our birth and which we need when we are grown is given us by education."

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