Okay so Ramus actually isn't super famous, but maybe he should be. If we are going to study any Puritan educational philosophy, we have to spend time on Peter Ramus. Pierre de la Ram é e was a 16th Century Humanist Protestant. Even though he had significant disagreements with prominent reformers such as Bullinger and Beza, Ramus was counted as a protestant martyr when he was killed during the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre. He had been a student of Johannes Sturm, the "German Cicero" and major reformer of education in Strasbourg. (Richard Gamble has a fun reading from Sturm in The Great Tradition ). Apparently, Sturm sparked Ramus' great interest in the study and application of logic. Ramus, being the orderly, logical mathematician that he was, looked at the Trivium as it was taught in his day, and thought it was disorganized. In Logic and Rhetoric in England: 1500-1700 , Howell says, As Ramus looked at the scholastic logic, the traditional rhe
A look at Reformed and Puritan views of the liberal arts, especially via William Ames's Technometry. Classical Christian education, homeschooling, and Biblical worldview.