Cheiron teaches Jason the lyre |
Centaur toy from 10th century BCE |
In our days of compulsory testing of the literary and numeracy of even the very young (in my view, year 2 SATS are a form of child abuse), it's good to recall that Cheiron said that forcing children to read before the age of seven was counter-productive.* Cheiron for Minister of Education, say I!
Box on table is labelled CHEIRONEIA |
The Greeks, then, would be shocked at how we ‘educate’ our four to
six-year-olds. But they wouldn’t be surprised at the popularity of centaurs in modern youth culture. I spent hours this week baffled by the explicit initiatory adventures of she-centaur Himeno
Kimihara, in the bestselling manga
series A Centaur's Life, until my own youngest teenager patiently explained that you start such books at what I call
the ‘end’, the right-hand cover as you hold it.
But
the best find of the week was this old bike advert. Cheiron, who had
attempted to teach the youth to ride a horse, is in my view not racked with envious desire
for a velocipede. He doesn’t need one. What he is actually planning is a
centaur revolution: ‘four legs good, two wheels bad’.
* That seven is the earliest age (aetas) at which a child is able "intellectum disciplinarum capere et laborem pati" was a Cheironic Precept (Quintilian Inst. Orat. 1.1.15).
Peirce Brosnan as Cheiron in Percy Jackson movie |
* That seven is the earliest age (aetas) at which a child is able "intellectum disciplinarum capere et laborem pati" was a Cheironic Precept (Quintilian Inst. Orat. 1.1.15).
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