Education, in like manner engrafts a new man on the native stock, & improves what in his nature was vicious & perverse, into qualities of virtue and social worth; and it cannot be but that each generation succeeding to the knowledge acquired by all those who preceded it, adding to it their own acquisitions & discoveries, and handing the mass down for successive & constant accumulation, must advance the knowledge & well-being of mankind
This assessment of education by the writers shows their view on how transformative it can be. They describe education as a way to find moral guidance. They also bestow upon it credit for the advancement of civilizations. The first part is rather interesting because it assumes that before education, man is mean and immoral, by his untouched nature. In modern times, we might think of that statement as unfair and unreasonable. This may be an issue with differing definitions of education, however. Ana Bakke.