December 1992
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9 Reads
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158 Citations
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies
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December 1992
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9 Reads
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158 Citations
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies
October 1992
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1 Read
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3 Citations
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies
October 1991
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9 Reads
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5 Citations
The Philosophical Quarterly
October 1991
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4 Reads
The Philosophical Quarterly
September 1991
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7 Reads
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11 Citations
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies
MillJohn Stuart. Public and Parliamentary Speeches. (The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, Vols. XXVIII and XXIX.) Edited by RobsonJohn M. and KinzerBruce L.. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 1988. Pp. lxxiii, 687. 135.00. - Volume 22 Issue 1 - Joseph Hamburger
September 1989
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9 Reads
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1 Citation
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies
MillJohn Stuart. Newspaper Writings. Vol. XXII, December 1822–July 1831. Vol. XXIII, August 1831–October 1834. Vol. XXIV, January 1835–June 1847. Vol. XXV, December 1847–July 1873. The Collected Works of John Stuart Mill. Edited by RobsonAnn P. and RobsonJohn M.. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 1986. Pp. ciii, 1526. $175.00. - Volume 20 Issue 1 - Joseph Hamburger
July 1986
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21 Citations
The Modern Language Review
December 1985
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30 Reads
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3 Citations
American Political Science Association
J.S. Mill's deep interest in French intellectual, political, and social affairs began in 1820 when, in his fourteenth year, he went to France to live for a year with the family of Sir Samuel Bentham. French became his second language, and France his second home, where he died and was buried in 1873. His interest in history began even earlier when, as a child of seven, he tried to imitate his father's labours on the History of British India; though he never wrote a history in his maturity, study of the past remained a passion and helped shape the philosophy of history that informed his views of society and ethics. His intense interest in contemporary French politics also led him to seek connections between historical developments and present trends, both seen by his from a Radical perspective approproate to what he believed to be an age of transition. The English historians of France, including Walter Scott and Thomas Carlyle, as well as the French, some of whom were themselves political figures, are judged by their historical methods, but those methods are seen as having practical effects in shaping as well as revealing the mind of the times. This volume brings together for the first time the essays, running from 1826 to 1849, that meld these abiding interests. They give as well insights into Mill's personal aspirations, his developing view of comparative politics and sociology, his concern for freedom, and his feminism. During these years Mill worked on a published his System of Logic, Book VI of which shows in condensed form the results of the speculations here developed; reading these essays with that work, which made his reputation as a philosopher, enables one to see the effects of romanticism on analytic thought in a way not as clearly evident even in Mill's Autobiography. Independently important, then, the essays in this volume also enable us to interpret anew the practical and theoretical concerns fundamental to his formative years and maturity. John C. Cairns' Introduction demonstrates how the essays reveal, through their reactions to the Revolutions of 1789, 1830, and 1848, and to French historiography, politics, and thought, the effect of France on Mill's ideas, and also the way in which his other concerns influenced his reactions to France. The texts, with the variants and notes that are the hallmark of this edition, are described in John M. Robson's Textual Introduction, which explains the editorial principles and methods.
December 1984
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8 Reads
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22 Citations
American Political Science Association
June 1983
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1 Read
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1 Citation
American Political Science Association
... Philosophically, this privacy dilemma can be viewed through the lens of John Stuart Mill's harm principle (Mill, 2022). Mill's assertion that individuals should be free to act as they please unless their actions cause harm to others raises questions about the potential harm arising from the gathering and utilization of biometric data. ...
December 1992
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies
... In tegenstelling tot het bezit en het raadplegen van pornografie -handelingen die gesteld worden in de loutere privésfeer (tussen instemmende volwassenen) -is de problematiek van publicatie van pornografie meer complex . Mill verzet zich niet zozeer tegen het bestaan van regelgeving an sich, maar eerder tegen de ruime beoordelingsvrijheid van rechters en tegen de strafrechtelijke benadering in plaats van een civielrechtelijke benadering (Mill, 1984). ...
December 1984
American Political Science Association
... However, John Stuart Mill (1806Mill ( -1874 was the classical political economist most interested in Hindoos matters. As is well known, J.S. Mill was the eldest son of James Mill, the author of the celebrated The History of British India (1817) (Mill, 1981). Mill, like his father, joined the East India Company in 1823 and became an Examiner of the company by December 1830 until the company lost its charter in 1858 (Bell, 2010;Moir, 1990). ...
December 1981
MLN
... The progress of modern civilization […] has lasted, and remained steadily progressive, through fifteen centuries; which no other civilization has ever done [24]. ...
December 1985
American Political Science Association
... Education meant for Mill the cultivation of the intellect, of moral powers, and of aesthetic. Education is not to teach, "but to fit the mind for learning from its own consciousness and observation" (Mill, 1981). The reasoning is: A good government cultivates moral education; moral education makes human beings moral, thinking people who do not merely act as machines and, in the long run, makes people to claim control over their own actions and inspires them to intensely seek the truth (Mill, 1948(Mill, , 1973. ...
July 1986
The Modern Language Review
... Politicamente ativo, Stuart Mill defendia questões controversas à época, como o direito ao voto das mulheres. Seus trabalhos versavam sobre economia, ética, religião, filosofia social, metafísica, e questões relevantes para a sociedade naquele período (Mill, 1988). ...
September 1991
Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies