The education described in [Some Thoughts Concerning Education] was what Locke had in mind only for children of a relatively small elite (and he was thinking mainly of the boys here). Locke wanted this education to create the archetype of a gentleman: a rationally thinking, morally dependable, socially capable person given to both adequate reflection and adequate action. To achieve this, the necessary basis had to be a sober, natural, healthy development of the body. In the second place, it required the development of (in this order) VirTue, WisDom, Breeding, and Learning. Locke considered good MorAl-s and good manners more important than Know Ledge; and as far as knowledge was concerned, he stressed it should be selected not just because of some educational tradition, but rather for reasons of usability and practicality - as became apparent, for example, in his exposition about learning foreign languages and one's own.