| United States. Office of Education - 1873 - 1128 σελίδες
...human society. The evidence npon the intimate relation of crime and ignorance is clear, complete, and ample. It may be comprised in two general propositions...education. If these proportions are true, (and wo have mado rather an underestimate,) then, after making due allowance for crimes committed from passion,... | |
| United States. Bureau of Education - 1873 - 1136 σελίδες
...ignorance is clear, complete, and ample. It may be comprised in two general propositions : Firnt. • That one-third of all criminals are totally uneducated,...some education. If these proportions are true, (and we have made rather an underestimate,) then, after making due allowance for crimes committed from passion,... | |
| California. Department of Public Instruction - 1873 - 390 σελίδες
...propositions: First — That one thiid of all criminals are totally uneducated, and that four fifths are practically uneducated, Secondly — That the...classes is at least tenfold as great as the proportion ft om those having some education. If these proportions are true (and wo have made rather an underestimate),... | |
| 1874 - 652 σελίδες
...criminals are totally uneducated, and that four fifths are practically uneducated. " Secondly—That the proportion of criminals from the illiterate classes...some education. " If these proportions are true (and we have made rather an underestimate), then, after making due allowance for crimes committed from passion,... | |
| George Ripley, Charles Anderson Dana - 1874 - 838 σελίδες
...1872), concludes: "First, that one third of all criminals are totally uneducated, and that four fifths are practically uneducated; secondly, that the proportion...the proportion from those having some education." According to the same authority, about 60 per cent, of paupers in the United States are totally ignorant,... | |
| George Leib Harrison - 1877 - 484 σελίδες
...uneducated, and four-fifths are practically uneducated ; and Second, that the proportion of prisoners from the illiterate classes is at least ten-fold as great as the proportion of those having some education. This is no longer an idea or speculation ; it is a well-recognized... | |
| George Leib Harrison - 1877 - 454 σελίδες
...uneducated, and four-fifths are practically uneducated; and Second, that the proportion of prisoners from the illiterate classes is at least ten-fold as great as the proportion of those having some education. This is no longer ari idea or speculation; it is a well-recognized... | |
| George Leib Harrison - 1877 - 476 σελίδες
...uneducated, and four-fifths are practically uneducated ; and Second, that the proportion of prisoners from the illiterate classes is at least ten-fold as great as the proportion of those having some education. This is no longer an idea or speculation ; it is a well-recognized... | |
| 1881 - 674 σελίδες
...that one-third of all criminals are totally uneducated, and four-fifths practically uneducated, and that the proportion of criminals from the illiterate...the proportion from those having some education."* The logic, then, of the argument seems to be in its essence simply this: Ignorance has no relation... | |
| 1881 - 662 σελίδες
...third of all criminals are totally uneducated, and four fifths are practically uneducated. " Second. That the proportion of criminals from the illiterate...the proportion from those having some education." In conclusion, why does and why should the State establish and sustain a public-school system ? Sahts... | |
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