“ A man can be prevented from breaking into other persons' houses by shutting him up, but shutting him up may not alter his disposition to commit burglary. ”
John Dewey, Democracy and Education (1916). copy citation
Author | John Dewey |
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Source | Democracy and Education |
Topic | house |
Date | 1916 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/852/852-h/852-h.htm |
Context
“A harsh and commanding tone may be effectual in keeping a child away from the fire, and the same desirable physical effect will follow as if he had been snatched away. But there may be no more obedience of a moral sort in one case than in the other. A man can be prevented from breaking into other persons' houses by shutting him up, but shutting him up may not alter his disposition to commit burglary. When we confuse a physical with an educative result, we always lose the chance of enlisting the person's own participating disposition in getting the result desired, and thereby of developing within him an intrinsic and persisting direction in the right way.”
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