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1.
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The educational lawsuit of interest versus effort
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1
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2.
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The case against the current theory of effort
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2
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3.
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The case against the current theory of interest
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3
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4.
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Each is strong in its attacks upon the opposite theory
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6
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5.
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Both fail to recognize the identity of facts and actions with the self
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7
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6.
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Both are intellectually and morally harmful
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7
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7.
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The child's demand for realization of his own impulses cannot be suppressed
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8
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8.
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Emphasizing outward habits of action leaves the child's inner nature to its caprices
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10
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9.
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Making things interesting substitutes the pleasure of excitation for that of activity
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12
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10.
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The result is division of energies
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13
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(a) In disagreeable effort it is simultaneous
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(b) In adventitious interest it is successive
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11.
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When properly conceived, interest and effort are vitally related
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14
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1.
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A brief descriptive account of interest
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16
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2.
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The active or propulsive phase
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17
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3.
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The objective phase
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19
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4.
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The emotional phase
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20
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5.
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Interest is primarily a form of self-expressive activity
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21
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6.
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Direct or immediated interest
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21
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7.
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Indirect, transferred or mediated interest
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22
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8.
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Two thoroughgoing errors
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23
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(a) Selecting subject-matter regardless of interest
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(b) Making method a device for dressing up unrelated materials
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9.
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The criterion for judging cases of transferred interest
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25
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(a) Are means and ends intrinsically connected?
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(b) Two illustrative cases
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10.
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Means and end are stages of a single developing activity
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28
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(a) Three illustrations
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11.
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Failure follows the appeal to adventitious or substituted interests
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33
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12.
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The true relation of subject-matter and the child's activities
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34
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13.
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Consequences of this view for pleasure and happiness
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35
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14.
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There is no rigid line between direct and indirect interests
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36
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15.
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Indirect interests are symptomatic of the expansion of simple activities into more complex ones
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38
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16.
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Indirect values become direct
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39
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17.
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Interest is legitimate only when it fosters development
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41
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18.
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Genuine interest indicates personal identification with a course of action
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43
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1.
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The demand for effort is a demand for continuity in the face of difficulties
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46
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2.
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It has no significance apart from an end to be reached
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47
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3.
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Persistent but obstructed activity creates conflicting tendencies; dislike and longing
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49
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4.
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The emotion of effort or stress is a warning to reflect
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50
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(a) On the worth of the end
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(b) On the provision of new means
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5.
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The experience of difficulty may have a double effect
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(a) To weaken the impetus in a forward direction
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51
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(b) To increase consciousness of the end
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52
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6.
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A conscious aim inspirits and guides in two ways
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(a) It makes the individual more conscious of his purpose
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53
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(b) It turns his energy from thoughtless struggle to reflective judgment
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53
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7.
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The difference between educative and uneducative tasks
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55
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8.
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The criteria to be borne in mind
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56
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(a) Is it so easy that it fails to stimulate thought?
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(b) Is it so difficult that it discourages activity?
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9.
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Some specific consequences of violating these criteria
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57
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10.
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Good teaching must stimulate initiative
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58
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11.
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Difficulties and effort occur normally with increased depth and scope of thinking
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59
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12.
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Motive is a name for end in its active or dynamic
capacity
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60
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13.
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Personal motivation cannot be thought of apart
from an object or end in view
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61
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14.
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The problem is not to find a motive, but materials
and conditions for the exercise of activities
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62
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15.
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The use and function of subject-matter is to promote the growth of personal powers
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63
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1.
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Genuine interest is always marked by the absorption of powers in an occupation or pursuit
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65
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2.
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Activity includes all the expressions that involve growth of power
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66
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(a) It specially includes: Power to realize the meaning of what is done
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(b) It excludes action under external constraint, random reaction, and habitual action
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3.
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True educative interests or activities vary indefinitely
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67
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4.
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Physical activity
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67
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(a) In so far as physical activity has to be
learned it is intellectual in value
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68
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(b) The importance of school occupations
which involves the exercise of senses and movements
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69
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(c) Sense organs are simply the pathways of
stimuli to motor responses
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70
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(d) Growth of knowledge occurs In adapting
sense-stimulus and motor response
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71
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(e) The great value of a wide range of play games, and occupations
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72
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5.
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Constructive activity
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74
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(a) The use of tools and appliances makes
possible development through complicated activities of long duration
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75
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(b) The use of intervening tools distinguishes games and work from play
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76
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(c) Work is distinguished from play only by the presence of an intellectual quality
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79
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(d) Children need both work and play
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80
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6.
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Intellectual activity
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81
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(a) The intellectual phases previously subordinate, develop and become dominant
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82
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(b) Interest in the theoretical becomes direct
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83
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7.
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Social activity
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(a) The child early identifies his concerns with those of others
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84
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(b) His social interest also suffuses his interest in things
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86
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(c) Impersonal material should be presented in the rôle it actually plays in life
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87
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(d) There is a close connection between social and moral interests
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88
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(e) Interest itself is not selfish; its character depends upon its objects
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88
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1.
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All interests mark an identification of self with ends and means
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90
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2.
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All misconceptions of interest come from ignoring its moving, developing nature
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91
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3.
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The idea of interest protects pedagogical theory
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(a) From a merely internal conception of mind
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92
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(b) From a merely external conception of subject-matter
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94
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4.
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Interest is obtained by considering and aiming at the conditions that lie back of it
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95
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