Education

About this Collection

Debates about education go far beyond the classroom and consider the way an understanding of education affects the human condition, while placing an emphasis on the advancement of society. Some of the questions our authors raise are: what kind of education is appropriate for a free society, how should it be funded, what role should the state play, what should individuals be taught in order to make them good citizens, and how should individuals be taught?

Key People

Titles & Essays

The Advancement of Learning

Sir Francis Bacon (author)

The first of Bacon’s writings on the nature of science and the scientific method. He also had a view of the unity of knowledge, both scientific and non-scientific.

LIBERTY MATTERS

The Water Truce

By: Anika Prather

LIBERTY MATTERS

LIBERTY MATTERS

LIBERTY MATTERS

LIBERTY MATTERS

LIBERTY MATTERS

LIBERTY MATTERS

LIBERTY MATTERS

Kant on Education (über Pädagogik)

Immanuel Kant (author)

One of the leading figures of the Enlightenment gives his thoughts on the issue of education.

Education

James Mill (author)

One of the articles James Mill wrote for the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Emile, or Education

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (author)

Rousseau’s classic work on the philosophy and practice of education. Emile’s tutor attempts to show how a young person can be brought up to fulfill their innate natural goodness in a corrupt society.

Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects (1861, 1911)

Herbert Spencer (author)

The President of Harvard University has some positive things to say in his edition of Spencer’s writings on education. In addition to republishing 4 essays which first appeared in the 1850s, Eliot also includes other essays on…

THE READING ROOM

Francis Bacon’s The Advancement of Learning

By: Philip D. Bunn

It may seem strange to those this side of the Enlightenment that “the advancement of learning” should need any defense. If anything, we today are plagued with fears of misunderstanding rapidly advancing science, or of standing on…
The Intellectual Portrait Series: A Conversation with Jacques Barzun

Jacques Barzun (author)

One of our most distinguished contemporary cultural historians, Jacques Barzun reflects on his long academic career and the movement of ideas he helped to shape through his seminal writings on liberal education in America.

Watch the…

The Liberal Mind

Kenneth Minogue (author)

Kenneth Minogue offers a brilliant and provocative exploration of liberalism in the Western world today: its roots and its influences, its present state, and its prospects in the new century. Minogue argues most Americans and most…

LIBERTY MATTERS

Liberty and Civic Education (November/December 2023)

By: David Davenport

What is civic education, and why does it matter? Further, what constitutes civic education, and whose task should it be to ensure a nation's citizens are civically literate? These are the questions this edition of Liberty Matters…
Observations upon Liberal Education, in All its Branches

George Turnbull (author)

Turnbull was the first member of the Scottish Enlightenment to provide a formal treatise on the theory and practice of education. He applied his ideas on the moral sense to the education of youth. Turnbull showed how a liberal…

THE READING ROOM

Scholasticism: How a Philosophical Monopoly Succumbs to New Ideas

By: Walter Donway

How do countries and cultures evolve from domination by one philosophy, one set of beliefs, one intellectual and academic establishment, to a radically different one?

THE READING ROOM

The Science of Dining: From the Liberty Fund Rare Book Room

By: Sarah Skwire

“The dinner table is the center for the teaching and practicing not just of table manners but of conversation, consideration, tolerance, family feeling, and just about all the other accomplishments of polite society.”~ Judith Martin…

LIBERTY MATTERS

Why Read the Ancients Today? (November/December 2022)

Roosevelt Montás (contributor)

Why have ancient texts fallen out of favor today? Once read widely- both in homes and schools- texts by "dead white men" are looked upon today with disfavor. Yet some scholars- and readers- insist upon their enduring...

LIBERTY MATTERS

Why Read the Ancients Today? (November/December 2022)

By: Roosevelt Montás, Anika Prather, Aeon J. Skoble, and Jennifer A. Frey

Why have ancient texts fallen out of favor today? Once read widely- both in homes and schools- texts by "dead white men" are looked upon today with disfavor. Yet some scholars- and readers- insist upon their enduring significance,…
The Works, vol. 8 (Some Thoughts Concerning Education, Posthumous Works, Familiar Letters)

John Locke (author)

This volume contains Some Thoughts Concerning Education, his posthumous works, and a number of letters.

The Works of Jeremy Bentham, vol. 8

John Bowring (editor)

An 11 volume collection of the works of Jeremy Bentham edited by the philosophic radical and political reformer John Bowring.

Loading...

Quotes

Education

Adam Smith on compulsory attendance in the classroom (1776)

Adam Smith

Education

Adam Smith on the rigorous education of young Fitzmaurice (1759)

Adam Smith

Education

Adam Smith on who colleges and universities ACTUALLY benefit

Adam Smith

Education

Frederick Douglass and His Secret Education

Frederick Douglass

Women’s Rights

Mary Wollstonecraft on Women’s Education

Mary Wollstonecraft

Notes About This Collection

See the books published by Liberty Fund in this subject area.