The Cambridge Companion to MillJohn Skorupski Cambridge University Press, 1998 M01 13 - 591 pages John Stuart Mill was one of the greatest thinkers of the nineteenth century. His impact on modern culture and thought has been immense, and his continuing importance for contemporary philosophy and social thought is widely recognized. This companion furnishes the reader with a systematic and up-to-date account of the many facets of Mill's thought and influence. New readers will find this the most convenient and accessible guide to Mill currently available. Advanced students and specialists will find a conspectus of recent developments in the interpretation of Mill. |
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Page 4
... concerns to Green's is , in comparison , not so clearcut . Mill operates with a ' positive ' notion of moral freedom as well as a ' negative ' notion of civil liberty . By the end of his life he thought of himself as a kind of socialist ...
... concerns to Green's is , in comparison , not so clearcut . Mill operates with a ' positive ' notion of moral freedom as well as a ' negative ' notion of civil liberty . By the end of his life he thought of himself as a kind of socialist ...
Page 5
... concern with the ethi- cal stature of the individual just as Green's liberal interventionism does , and he rejects centralist and revolutionary or class - based kinds of socialism just as much as Green would . Mill's concern with the ...
... concern with the ethi- cal stature of the individual just as Green's liberal interventionism does , and he rejects centralist and revolutionary or class - based kinds of socialism just as much as Green would . Mill's concern with the ...
Page 33
... concerned with ways to promote a plan for proportional representation . 16 Here I follow John Gray's interpretation of Berlin ( Gray 1993 and 1995 ) . However , both Berlin and Popper show a much stronger continuity with classical ...
... concerned with ways to promote a plan for proportional representation . 16 Here I follow John Gray's interpretation of Berlin ( Gray 1993 and 1995 ) . However , both Berlin and Popper show a much stronger continuity with classical ...
Page 37
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Page 44
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Contents
Mill on language and logic | 35 |
Mill mathematics and the naturalist tradition | 57 |
Mill on induction and scientific method | 112 |
Mill phenomenalism and the self | 139 |
Mill on religion | 176 |
Mill on psychology and the moral sciences | 203 |
Mills utilitarianism | 255 |
Mills political economy Ricardian science and liberal utilitarian art | 293 |
Democracy socialism and the working classes | 372 |
The subjection of women | 396 |
Mill and the Classical world | 423 |
The reception and early reputation of Mills political thought | 464 |
Mill in a liberal landscape | 497 |
Guide to further reading | 541 |
544 | |
571 | |
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analysis argument arithmetic Athenian belief Bentham civilization claim classical liberalism collective conception concerned critics defend democracy discussion distinction doctrine economic empiricism empiricist enumerative induction epistemology equal essay ethical evidence existence experience explain external fact feelings freedom geometry Grote hedonism human nature Hume idea ideal individual inductive inference intellectual interests interpretation intuitive J. S. Mill James Mill John Skorupski John Stuart Mill justice knowledge labour liberal Liberty mathematics means ment mental method Mill's view Millian mind moral normative notion objects ontology Oxford person phenomena philosophy philosophy of mathematics Plato pleasure Political Economy position possibilities of sensation principle priori production propositions psychological question reason reform relativity of knowledge role rules scientific sense sentiments simply Skorupski 1989 social society Stephen Subjection of Women System of Logic theory things thought Thucydides tion truth utility Whewell