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Excerpt from Education and the Significance of Life

February 22, 2012

There is an efficiency inspired by love which goes far beyond and is much greater than the efficiency of ambition; and without love, which brings an integrated understanding of life, efficiency breeds ruthlessness. Is this not what is actually taking place all over the world? Our present education is geared to industrialization and are, its principal aim being to develop efficiency; and we are caught in this machine of ruthless competition and mutual destruction. If education leads to war, if it teaches us to destroy or be destroyed, has it not utterly failed?

To bring about right education, we must obviously understand the meaning of life as a whole, and for that we have to be able to think, not consistently, but directly and truly. A consistent thinker is a thoughtless person, because he conforms to a pattern; he repeats phrases and thinks in a groove. We cannot understand existence abstractly or theoretically. To understand life is to understand ourselves and that is both the beginning and the end of education.

Education is not merely acquiring knowledge, gathering and correlating facts; it is to see the significance of life as a whole. But the whole cannot be approached through the part–which is what governments, organized religions and authoritarian parties are attempting to do.

The function of education is to create human beings who are integrated and therefore intelligent. We may take degrees and be mechanically efficient without being intelligent. Intelligence is not mere information; it is not derived from books, nor does it consist of clever self-defensive responses to aggressive assertions. One who has not studied may be more intelligent than the learned. We have made examinations and degrees the criterion of intelligence and have developed cunning minds that avoid vital human issues. Intelligence is the capacity to perceive the essential, the what is; and to awaken this capacity in oneself and in others, is education

Education should help us to discover lasting values so that we do not merely cling to formulas or repeat slogans; it should help us to break down our national and social barriers, instead of emphasizing them, for they breed antagonism between man and man. Unfortunately, the present system of education is making us subservient, mechanical and deeply thoughtless; though it awakens us intellectually, inwardly it leaves us incomplete, stultified and uncreative.

Without an integrated understanding of life, our individual and collective problems will only deepen and extend. The purpose of education is not to produce more scholars, technicians and job hunters, but integrated men and women who are free of fear; for only between such human beings can there be enduring peace.

It is in the understanding of ourselves that fear comes to an end. If the individual is to grapple with life from moment to moment, if he is to face its intricacies, its miseries and sudden demands, he must be infinitely pliable and therefore free of theories and particular patterns of thought.

Education should not encourage the individual to conform to society or to be negatively harmonious with it, but help him to discover the true values which come with unbiased investigation and self-awareness. When there is no self-knowledge, self-expression becomes self-assertion, with all its aggressive and ambitious conflicts. Education should awaken the capacity to be self-aware and not merely indulge in gratifying self-expression.

What is the good of learning if in the process of living we are destroying ourselves? As we are having a series of devastating wars, one right after another, there is obviously something radically wrong with the way we bring up our children. I think most of us are aware of this, but we do not know how to deal with it.

Systems, whether educational or political are not chanced mysteriously; they are transformed when there is a fundamental change in ourselves. The individual is of first importance, not the system; and as, long as the individual does not understand the total process of himself, no system, whether of the left or of the right, can bring order and peace to the world.

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3 Responses to “Excerpt from Education and the Significance of Life”

  1. Sloane Mak says:

    What a coincidence. I just published points from Ch.1 as I am doing this book with a group of students.

  2. There are some article that talks on education and It may make the existence of scholars in a very degree less difficult, and furthermore it helps make our children presently even smarter. Simply because this is a component of our lives, universities have included this like a vulnerable to permit the college students remembers with regards to the way to utilize this device effectively. Help This will help?

  3. This article is well-written and makes some very good points. It mentions that proficiency in a specified branch of knowledge alone cannot account for the purpose of education. Life is much more than getting an education to become experts in a given field of study. One may argue that education should go beyond just proficiency. Education is much more. It is about ingenuity and expression of one’s self to the world. It is not enough to just go to school to get a degree. One has to apply that knowledge in a unique way that has not been thought to them in school, unlike the proficiency acquired from formal education.

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