His 1984 book on Yeats, Eliot, and Pound was described by Seamus Deane as lacking a little clarity, panache and focus, but offering an " engrossing " exploration of the relationship between modernism and reactionary politics, which he links via memory, and particularly Archibald Alison's theory of associationism; Deane called it " a complicated story, illustrated by Craig with such well-chosen and well-timed quotations that it is difficult to resist ."
32.
The philosophical underpinning of Priestley's associationism, an expansion of John Locke's theories in " Essay Concerning Human Understanding " ( 1690, postulated that the human mind operated according to natural laws and that the most important law for the formation of the self was " associationism . " For Hartley, associationism was a physical process : vibrations in the physical world travelled through the nerves attached to people's sense organs and ended up in their brains.
33.
The philosophical underpinning of Priestley's associationism, an expansion of John Locke's theories in " Essay Concerning Human Understanding " ( 1690, postulated that the human mind operated according to natural laws and that the most important law for the formation of the self was " associationism . " For Hartley, associationism was a physical process : vibrations in the physical world travelled through the nerves attached to people's sense organs and ended up in their brains.
34.
The philosophical underpinning of Priestley's associationism, an expansion of John Locke's theories in " Essay Concerning Human Understanding " ( 1690, postulated that the human mind operated according to natural laws and that the most important law for the formation of the self was " associationism . " For Hartley, associationism was a physical process : vibrations in the physical world travelled through the nerves attached to people's sense organs and ended up in their brains.
35.
The theory underpinning Priestley's John Locke's theories in " Essay Concerning Human Understanding " ( 1690 ) and laid out in " Observations on Man " ( 1749 ), postulated that the human mind operated according to natural laws and that the most important law for the formation of the self was " associationism . " For Hartley, associationism was a physical process : vibrations in the physical world traveled through the nerves attached to people's sense organs and ended up in their brains.
36.
The theory underpinning Priestley's John Locke's theories in " Essay Concerning Human Understanding " ( 1690 ) and laid out in " Observations on Man " ( 1749 ), postulated that the human mind operated according to natural laws and that the most important law for the formation of the self was " associationism . " For Hartley, associationism was a physical process : vibrations in the physical world traveled through the nerves attached to people's sense organs and ended up in their brains.
37.
Edgeworth asserts that " learning should be a positive experience and that the discipline of education is more important during the formative years than the acquisition of knowledge . " The system attempted to " adapt both the curriculum and methods of teaching to the needs of the child; the endeavour to explain moral habits and the learning process through associationism; and most important, the effort to entrust the child with the responsibility for his own mental culture . " The ultimate goal of Edgeworth's system was to create an independent thinker who understands the consequences of his or her actions.