Universities - American - English - German (Paperback)


UNIVERSITIES AMERICAN ENGLISH GKRMAN BY ABRAHAM FLEXNER OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS NKW YORK. LONDON TORONTO 1930 CONTENTS PAGE PREFACE vii PART I THE IDEA OF A MODERN UNIVERSITY 3 PART II AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES 39 PART III ENGLISH UNIVERSITIES 221 PART IV GERMAN UNIVERSITIES .... 305 PREFACE THIS volume is an expansion of three lectures on Universities given at Oxford in May 1928 on the invitation of the Rhodes Trust. The invitation stipu lates that the lecturer reside at Oxford during the en tire term in which the lectures are given a provision that may be unreservedly commended, first, because the lecturer is thus enabled to feel something of Ox fords charm, secondly, because quite unconsciously he gains rather more than he is likely to impart. This is true of one Rhodes lecturer, at least. From the autumn of 1928 to the summer of 1929, I visited the universities of Germany and England for the purpose of obtaining a fresh view of their situa tion, problems, and efforts. The whole of the next year, 1929-1930, was devoted to gathering additional data and to rewriting. In May 1930 the Oxford Uni versity Press printed and bound the original proof sheets in page form, and I was thus enabled to submit the text to about thirty men, professors and adminis trators in America and Europe, who read it with care and commented on it freely and helpfully. During the summer of 1930 I revised the book. I state these facts in order that the reader may know that, though the ultimate responsibility is wholly mine, I have spared no effort to obtain the facts and to submit my views in advance to competent criticism, I am quite sure that the result will completely satisfy no one but I shall have achieved inypurpose if I have opened for dis- viij PREFACE cussion a few fundamental questions respecting the function of the university in modern life, The reader will observe that my discussion of exist ing universities is unsymmetrical. I have not tried to pour universities into one mould, to view them from a single point of view, or to ask the same ques tions about all of them. Rather, having in mind the idea of a modern university, I have approached the universities of America, England, and Germany from the standpoint of their individual characteristics. I have asked myself where, with this ideal before us, do they now satisfy Where do they now fall short Of their history I have mentioned only the salient points essential to an understanding of the answers to these questions-And I have given rather more space to the latter question than to the former, because I feel sure that, if errors and abuses are once corrected, the ideal will almost of its own force assert itself differently, in different countries, of course, but to the same ultimate purpose. At first sight it may seem that I have devoted a disproportionately large amount of space to American universities. Such is, I think, not the case. American universities require more space be cause they do so many more things and I could not possibly expect my readers foreign or American to understand them, if I did not quote and discuss a sufficient number of concrete instances. I am under so many obligations that it is Impossible for me to specify any one in particular 1 should have indeed to go back more than forty years, for the present volume represents not merely the work of the last few years but the net result of an experience withuniversities in this country and abroad that be- gan when my eldest brother sent me to the Johns Hop Mns in 1884, From that day to this, I have been for- Vifij PREFACE tunate enough to have been enabled in one way or another to keep in almost constant contact with uni versity life. Quite obviously, a book of this kind is not original but just as obviously the author himself can not know whom to thank, or, if he has erred, whom beside himself to blame. I may not, however, omit to thank by name the Rhodes Trustees, Philip Kerr, Esq...

R935

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles9350
Mobicred@R88pm x 12* Mobicred Info
Free Delivery
Delivery AdviceShips in 10 - 15 working days


Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Product Description

UNIVERSITIES AMERICAN ENGLISH GKRMAN BY ABRAHAM FLEXNER OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS NKW YORK. LONDON TORONTO 1930 CONTENTS PAGE PREFACE vii PART I THE IDEA OF A MODERN UNIVERSITY 3 PART II AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES 39 PART III ENGLISH UNIVERSITIES 221 PART IV GERMAN UNIVERSITIES .... 305 PREFACE THIS volume is an expansion of three lectures on Universities given at Oxford in May 1928 on the invitation of the Rhodes Trust. The invitation stipu lates that the lecturer reside at Oxford during the en tire term in which the lectures are given a provision that may be unreservedly commended, first, because the lecturer is thus enabled to feel something of Ox fords charm, secondly, because quite unconsciously he gains rather more than he is likely to impart. This is true of one Rhodes lecturer, at least. From the autumn of 1928 to the summer of 1929, I visited the universities of Germany and England for the purpose of obtaining a fresh view of their situa tion, problems, and efforts. The whole of the next year, 1929-1930, was devoted to gathering additional data and to rewriting. In May 1930 the Oxford Uni versity Press printed and bound the original proof sheets in page form, and I was thus enabled to submit the text to about thirty men, professors and adminis trators in America and Europe, who read it with care and commented on it freely and helpfully. During the summer of 1930 I revised the book. I state these facts in order that the reader may know that, though the ultimate responsibility is wholly mine, I have spared no effort to obtain the facts and to submit my views in advance to competent criticism, I am quite sure that the result will completely satisfy no one but I shall have achieved inypurpose if I have opened for dis- viij PREFACE cussion a few fundamental questions respecting the function of the university in modern life, The reader will observe that my discussion of exist ing universities is unsymmetrical. I have not tried to pour universities into one mould, to view them from a single point of view, or to ask the same ques tions about all of them. Rather, having in mind the idea of a modern university, I have approached the universities of America, England, and Germany from the standpoint of their individual characteristics. I have asked myself where, with this ideal before us, do they now satisfy Where do they now fall short Of their history I have mentioned only the salient points essential to an understanding of the answers to these questions-And I have given rather more space to the latter question than to the former, because I feel sure that, if errors and abuses are once corrected, the ideal will almost of its own force assert itself differently, in different countries, of course, but to the same ultimate purpose. At first sight it may seem that I have devoted a disproportionately large amount of space to American universities. Such is, I think, not the case. American universities require more space be cause they do so many more things and I could not possibly expect my readers foreign or American to understand them, if I did not quote and discuss a sufficient number of concrete instances. I am under so many obligations that it is Impossible for me to specify any one in particular 1 should have indeed to go back more than forty years, for the present volume represents not merely the work of the last few years but the net result of an experience withuniversities in this country and abroad that be- gan when my eldest brother sent me to the Johns Hop Mns in 1884, From that day to this, I have been for- Vifij PREFACE tunate enough to have been enabled in one way or another to keep in almost constant contact with uni versity life. Quite obviously, a book of this kind is not original but just as obviously the author himself can not know whom to thank, or, if he has erred, whom beside himself to blame. I may not, however, omit to thank by name the Rhodes Trustees, Philip Kerr, Esq...

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Read Books

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

March 2007

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

March 2007

Authors

Dimensions

216 x 140 x 22mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

392

ISBN-13

978-1-4067-7418-4

Barcode

9781406774184

Categories

LSN

1-4067-7418-9



Trending On Loot