School is still in progress
We live in an age when many parents give their children more material things than they can use or appreciate. Children tend to take these things for granted. To describe to the later generations the sufferings of the Great Depression of the 1930s is like describing a sunset to a person born blind or the beauty of a symphony to one born without hearing. The description is not adequate. Experience becomes the best teacher.
Each generation needs to learn from the ones preceding it, building upon the knowledge learned by both the failure and success of former generations. But strangely, where morals are concerned many in every generation want to go back to the Garden of Eden and learn for themselves. Thus we go on making the same old mistakes and sinning the same old sins—with the same tragic results that characterize every age.