
This volume invites listeners to step back from today’s classrooms and discover how many of the ideas we label “new” have deep roots in centuries‑old practice. Through a series of lively lectures, the author shows that nature study, technical training, and even moral education were already being explored long before modern curricula took them up. By translating the language of past reformers into contemporary terms, the book reveals a continuity that challenges the myth of linear progress.
The narrative moves from the surprising contentment of medieval English workmen—who, despite meager wages, could afford essential goods—to the bleak middle of the eighteenth century, a period the author describes as the lowest point in educational history. It also highlights the steady growth of Catholic schooling in America and the parallel evolution of medical training, illustrating how each tradition has repeatedly solved familiar problems.
Listeners will come away with a richer appreciation for the enduring wisdom of earlier educators and a fresh perspective on the foundations of today’s learning systems.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (642K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Don Kostuch
Release date
2011-01-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1865–1942
A physician, medical historian, and prolific Catholic writer, he brought science, faith, and history together in a way that reached a wide popular audience. His books often explored the achievements of medieval medicine and the human side of medical practice.
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