"Those intending to continue in mathematics or science or technology... believe that a survey of the main directions along which living mathematics has developed would enable them to decide more intelligently in what particular field of mathematics, if any, they would find a lasting satisfaction. ...It is astonishing how few students entering serious work in mathematics or its applications have even the vaguest idea of the highways, the pitfalls, and the blind alleys ahead of them. Consequently, it is the easiest thing in the world for an enthusiastic teacher... to sell his misguided pupils a subject that has been dead for forty or a hundred years, under the sincere delusion that he is disciplining their minds. With only the briefest glimpse of what mathematics in this twentieth century—not in 2100 B.C.—is about, any student of normal intelligence should be able to distinguish between live teaching and dead mathematics. He will be less likely to drown in the ditch or perish in the wilderness."
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Mathematics_education