More of a mentor than a critic this time (People, Places and Books) Mr. Highet's discussion here is both a tribute to the...

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MAN'S UNCONQUERABLE MIND

More of a mentor than a critic this time (People, Places and Books) Mr. Highet's discussion here is both a tribute to the immortality of the mind and a stimulus to its application in the constant and continuous channels of thinking, learning and teaching. A classicist, Highet writes with the entire perspective of western civilization in full view-and with a sonorous, supple prose which in an invitation to learning in itself. Our advances, from animalism to humanity, from the use of tools and plants to the concepts of the passing but undying cultures of the Greek and Roman; the training of the mind, through challenge and experiment and association- for the ""Secret of education is never to forget the possibility of greatness""; the future of knowledge- which may have one of three destinies,

Pub Date: March 8, 1953

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1953

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