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Rather than analyze and refine the skills (industrial and commercial) that made Britain the workshop of the world (the English tradition), he concluded that the future well-being of industry could not be left to the practical man without technical education (i.e., the German tradition).42 He determined that educating the working populace would help to compensate for any potential loss of “local advantage” that Great Britain was likely to experience. He believed that general cultural elevation and an improved attitude toward business were also necessary.
Despite what Albert believed, it was Lyon Playfair who publicly expressed his anxiety about the dearth of technical education in Great Britain. He predicted that Europe would overtake England if it failed to adapt to the new industrial reality by altering her outlook and methods.43 He articulated the feelings of some of his colleagues when, in a lecture to the School of Mines, he stated that the extension of scientific and technical education was