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OR THE MEANS OF

DEVELOPING THE HUMAN FACULTIES.

BY J. L. LEVISON.

"The volume of nature is the book of knowledge; and he becomes most
wise, who makes the most judicious selection."

GOLDSMITH.

BOSTON:

ALLEN AND TICKNOR.

1834.

¿B1051

MAY 18 1837

1834

HARVARD UNIVERSITY

GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION

MONROE C. GUTMAN LIBRARY

Charles A. Green, Printer, 19 Water-street.

PREFACE.

In this volume, which is submitted to the unprejudiced, we have endeavoured to show how practical and easy Moral Culture becomes, when the real nature of man is understood. It is the peculiar duty of those who frame the laws of a country, and of those who administer them for the preservation of society, to adopt such a system of mental philosophy as will enable them to ascertain what number of the primitive faculties are connate, and also to distinguish between their uses and their abused states. This knowledge, indeed, would give incalculable advantages to all who influence society, and particularly to the Parent and Teacher: it would enable them to discriminate those excesses of the feelings which result from mis-directed or neglected education, and demonstrate the circumstances most favourable to give a moral and intellectual bias to the character of the rising generation. The fundamental truths of this science of mind are briefly stated in the first part of this work, and their practical application in the second; and the author hopes that a candid perusal of both parts will prove their value in developing and training the mental faculties.

J. L. LEVISON.

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CONTENTS.

Page.

Explanation of the Organs of the Moral and Religious Senti-
ments- Benevolence-Veneration - Firmness-Conscien-
tiousness, or Natural Sense of Right and Wrong-Hope, its
Uses and Abuses-Marvellousness, or Instinctive Credulity,

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