Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 541 Title: Statement by the Professors of Logic and Moral Philosophy Regarding theTeaching of Women Sudents Author(s): Adamson, Robert; Jones, Sir Henry Statement by the Professors of Logic and Moral Philosophy regarding the teaching of Women students, as submitted to the Senate on 16 Jan, 1896. See Minute Bk., p.205. The Faculty of Arts in its Report has expresed and has given grounds for the general view that in the interests of the education of women students provision for their insturction in the ordinary Arts curriculum should be made by admitting them to the ordinary University classes. The Faculty has also recommended in partcular that, in the case of certain claasses, including Logic and Moral Philosophy, the change in this direction from the present mode of holding separate classes or women students should be made forthwith. Agreeing in the general view taken by the Faculty which we think strongly confirmed by our special experience, we desire to make to the Senate an additional statement bearing on the particular recommendation made in so far as it concerns the classes of Logic and Moral Philosophy. 1. In these clases the course of lectures, forming the main portion of the work, is essentially systematic in character. The general principles of the subject are developed in systematic fashion and applied to details. For this reason alone it becomes impossible to effect any satisfactory distribution of the work such as would allow of the lectures being given in spearate portions by separate lecturers. If, therefore, a separate class for women students to be held, it appears to us that tehre cannot be in these subjects a division of labour between the Professor and his Assistant such as is possible in varying degree in most of the other Arts subjects. The lectures for the women's class must be given entirely enitehr by the Assistant, who in that case might either read the Professor's lectures or treat the subject independently, or by the Professor. That the aassistant should read the Professor's lectures seems to us a method so unsatisfactory in ever respect that we do not think it should be considered as a practicable alternative. That the assistant should discharge the functions of an independent lecturer is a method which could not always be adopted, which is open to the strong and we think unanswerable arguments that have been urged against the extension to Arts of the system of extra-mural lecturing, and which cannot commend itself as a mode of making 'adequate provision' for the teaching of women students. The only defensible method of making such provision seems therefore to be the delivery of the complete course of lectures by the Professor. 2. The recent important changes in the conditions of graduation in Arts have involved as a consequence an increase in the amount of definite Honours lecturing in our classes, and in our opinion the satisfactory working of the new plans of Arts study will necessitate additions to the minimum of Honours lectures which is at present undertaken. It will embarrass us greatly in our effort to form a satisfactory school of honours study in philosophy if we have to contemplate as a necessary portion of the ordinary work the conduct of a separate class for women students. 3. While we fully recognise the obligation on our own part to accept loyalty and to endeavour to give effect to any resolution adopted by the Senate and Court respecting the provision of instruction for women students, we draw attention to the fact that as regards our classes there has not been adopted by Senate and Court, so far as we are aware, any resolution defining the method for providing such instruction. Nor has there been such revision of the conditions of appointment to the Chairs of Logic and Moral Philosophy as might naturally be expected if so heavy an additional demand on the time of the Professors of these subjects was contemplated. If such a demand were made the Professors of Logic and Moral Philosophy would be placed in a very disadvantageous position not only as regards their predecessors in this University but as regards the occupants of similar chairs in any of the other Universities of Scotland. These considerations seem to us to constitute a strong ground for urging that the women students should next session be admitted to the ordinary classes of Logic & Moral Philosophy. (Signed) Henry Jones (") Robert Adamson