56 research outputs found
The Snedden-Farnsworth Exchanges of 1917 and 1918 on the Value of Music and Art in Education
In 1917 and 1918, Charles Hubert Farnsworth, a leading music educator from Teachers College, Columbia University, and David Snedden, a critic and educational theorist of national repute, privately exchanged views on the role of art and music in society and in education. Snedden mulled over Herbert Spencer's query “What knowledge is of most worth?” and concluded that music must have practical survival value: it must contribute primarily to the maintenance of social and political order and secondarily to other aims. Farnsworth, on the other hand, thought that music performance or appreciation should be for the immediate joy that it gives the individual, not for some deferred social purpose no matter how important it might be. These divergent positions are explained in light of Farnsworth's interests in philosophy and Snedden's schooling in Spencerian and Darwinian thought.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68979/2/10.2307_3345173.pd
American Indian Treaties and the Presidents: A Guide to the Treaties Proclaimed by Each Administration
The Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Edited by RALPH L. RUSK, Professor of English in Columbia University. Six volumes. (New York: Columbia University Press. 1939. Pp. lxvi, 458; 471; 462; 541; 546; 633. $30.00.)
The study and teaching of history
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Sea Change: Interest‐based vs. cultural‐cognitive account of strategic choice in the 1890s
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