Robert Owen was one of the most extraordinary Englishmen who ever lived
and a great man. In a way his history is the history of the
establishment of modern industrial Britain, reflected in the mind and
activities of a very intelligent, capable and responsible industrialist,
alive to the best social thought of his time. The organisation of
industrial labour, factory legislation, education, trade unionism,
co-operation, rationalism: he was passionately and ably engaged in all
of them. His community at New Lanark was the nearest thing to an
industrial heaven in the Britain of dark satanic mills; he tried to
found a rational co-operative community in the USA. In everything he
contemplated, he saw education as a key. This selection of his writings
on education illustrates his rationalist concept of the formation of
character and its implications for education and society; also his
growing utopian concern with social reorganisation; and third, his
impact on social movements. Silver's introduction shows Owen's
relationship to particular educational traditions and activities and his
long-term influence on attitudes to education.