Second
to Plato’s Republic, Rousseau’s Emile is
the philosophical book on education which needs to be first examined that
is why, as Geraint Parry cries, “In Emile, he produces an account of an education that is
designed to allow persons to live an honest life even when surrounded by the
pressures of a corrupt society. It shows Rousseau’s target was to present
his Philosophy through this titanic creation, which messages:
“Why
we should build our happiness on the opinions of other
when we can find it in our hearts”.
when we can find it in our hearts”.
Rousseau thinks, man is naturally good but the
society corrupts him so the aim of education should be to make a compromise
between the natural and the social selves; thus, the creator of Emile favours a
“negative” education which consists in “unlearning” the artificialities of
society: this education would produce a virtuous circle in which transformed
human beings would live in a transformed society, which is clear from the point
of Restif de la Bretone that Emile was responsible for the “provoking
obstinate, insolent, impudent, arrogant generations of the terms.” On this
basis, its focus is upon the individual tuition of a boy in line with the
principles of “natural education”: this focus tends to be what is taken up by
later commentators yet Rousseau’s concern with the individual is balanced in
some of his other writings with the need for the public or national education.
Rousseau
was himself was quite unsuccessful as a teacher or as a tutor so, in Emile, he
tires to achieve through fiction what he could not accomplish in real life.
Further, Rousseau had left all his five children in an asylum—Emile is the
fictional son whom Rousseau brings up to relives his own childhood, which was
otherwise full of bitterness. The emotional vigour with which he speaks of
Emile is quite clear: “now it is time for real freedom; learn to be your
own master; control your heart, my Emile, and will be virtuous.” The
limitations of Emile as an exact model for child education are quite obvious:
the bringing up on an elite child under the guidance of an “ideal” tutor is far
fetched and impracticable. The education by
“nature
does not consent to play the part
of
schoolmistress.”
Even
the experiment succeeds in Emile’s cause, it cannot be applied on a large
because in actual life, things are not as easy as Rousseau makes them appear.
It
is not possible to arouse an ordinary child’s interest as early as Rousseau
imagined. To be, successful, his experiment requires ideal conditions, as Peter
Gay puts: “it is only in real conditions that Rousseau can envisage the
reconciliation on education for autonomy with an education for
community.” Especially in modern times, can one hope to control a child’s
environment? Even the rural region, which Rousseau favours, is no more immune
to the influence of the city. Even in villages, there is unimpeded flow of
images through TV and electronic gadgets. Interestingly, Rousseau shows a
remarkable awareness regarding the pitfalls of his system and denied that he
was writing a treatise Emile on education to be followed in practice. He wants
that the adult Emile may not be what he wanted him to be, as he wrote in 1764:
“you
are quite right to say that it is impossible to form an Emile. It is not
a treatise on education. It is a rather philosophical work on the
principle that man is naturally good.”
a treatise on education. It is a rather philosophical work on the
principle that man is naturally good.”
Although,
Emile cannot be followed in practice, ideas expressed in it have profound
relevance even in the modern times. For instance, Rousseau’s insistence on
treating the child as a child not as an adult is valid even today. The recent
debate on heavy school bags was anticipated by Rousseau when called books “the
curse of childhood”. He advocated a practical, natural education instead of
mechanical and artificial one which forces to the child to “mature
prematurely”. There are few a numerous ideas in Emile, which are of current
relevance.
In
spite of overt romanticism of Emile, we have to conclude that Rousseau was the
“great writer on civic education after Plato” and a pioneer of “progressive”
education whose vision should be seen in totally, as P.D. Jimack
says, “Rousseau was in fact little concerned with remedies and reforms,
the education of Emile is essentially a whole, and as such impracticable in any
immediate sense.” So, we should view Emile as a philosophical work in
fictional mode which throws up many ideas that can be used in the field of
education reform.
In
conclusion, Rousseau’s Emile is a classical statement of education but the
biggest hurdle in accepting Emile as a treatise is its form which makes it a
half treatise and half novel, thus it has hybrid form. The fictional nature of
the work may lead one to doubt the author’s seriousness—the book is essentially
utopian or romantic in nature. Emile pretends a wish fulfillment world, as P.D.
Jimack observes: “we may choose to see in Emile both a substitute son and
the child Rousseau would himself have liked to have been”. Let us end with
the words:
Rousseau’s
philosophy of education in Emile may not be practical,
but it is the education should be”
but it is the education should be”
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