
Originally Posted by
Morning Glory
I've wondered about this too, although more from an educational POV than from a literary one. it's a fact that as a parent your children are going to try and be like you, because you're the only influence they have during their formative years. when a child reaches the age where they start to develop intellectually and personally, when it becomes necessary to nurture their education, how do you go about doing so? as a parent and a person you're going to try and give them your wisdom and life lessons...but since they lack the experience in which you learned these things, you're just presenting a one-sided POV and expecting them to accept it on principle, contrary perhaps to there own experiences. isn't that sort of like brainwashing? even though it's innocent enough and has their best interest at heart, in a way it's still just as bias as the public education system and it's selective discourse. Do I want my child to learn things because I (or anyone else for that matter) says so, or because it is something that has relevence and value to them- and without that indoctrination into society and the roles of authority figures, is it possible for them to even know?
I don't know the answer to those questions. That's just something I've been thinking about.
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