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Mere Education
Mere Education: C.S. Lewis as Ethical teacher for our Time | Mark A. Pike
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The word 'mere' is used in the title of this book in its Middle English sense as an adjective 'nothing less than, complete'. This book is about schooling for a fair and vibrant society; it is about an education of hope, education that completes a person. In 'The Magician's Nephew' (1955), the first in C.S. LewisÕ Chronicles of Narnia series, Digory and Polly are dragged back through time into a world that is "devoid of life and barren of vegetation". Such a world is not a safe place for children and young people. When C.S. Lewis wrote that the task of the modern educator is 'to irrigate deserts' he was making the point that it is teachers who 'inculcate just sentiments' (Lewis 1978/1943, p.13) and enable the moral sense of their students to flourish. Mark A. Pike supports C.S. LewisÕ belief in the role of educators and has written 'Mere Education' to show how we might go about it so that 'the desert shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose' (Isaiah 35:1).
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amandacatherine
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As one who is increasingly interested in education, not just to teach facts but to help a young person learn to choose virtue, this book was incredibly interesting. It is a scholarly work which presents Lewis's ideas on the ideal education, though it is a bit short on the practical how-to elements I was hoping to see. A good read for the theories, anyhow.