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IV - SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION: NOTES OF AN AFTER-DINNER SPEECH

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

[Mr. Thackeray, talking of after-dinner speeches, has lamented that “one never can recollect the fine things one thought of in the cab” in going to the place of entertainment. I am not aware that there are any “fine things” in the following pages, but such as there are stand to a speech which really did get itself spoken, at the hospitable table of the Liverpool Philomathic Society, more or less in the position of what “one thought of in the cab. ”]

The introduction of scientific training into the general education of the country is a topic upon which I could not have spoken, without some more or less apologetic introduction, a few years ago. But upon this, as upon other matters, public opinion has of late undergone a rapid modification. Committees of both Houses of the Legislature have agreed that something must be done in this direction, and have even thrown out timid and faltering suggestions as to what should be done; while at the opposite pole of society, committees of working-men have expressed their conviction that scientific training is the one thing needful for their advancement, whether as men, or as workmen.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1870

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