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         Mill John Stuart:     more books (95)
  1. The Logic of the Moral Sciences (Open Court Classics) by John Stuart Mill, 1988-12-19
  2. Review of the Work of Mr John Stuart Mill Entitled, 'examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy.' by George Grote, 2010-07-24
  3. Utilitarianism by John Stuart Mill, 2009-02-06
  4. Auguste Comte And Positivism by John Stuart Mill, 2010-01-30
  5. John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand by Richard Reeves, 2009-07-01
  6. A System of Logic, Ratiocinative and Inductive by John Stuart Mill, 2009-10-29
  7. Philosophy of John Stuart Mill (Modern Library, 322.1) by John Stuart Mill, 1961-10-12
  8. On the Logic of the Moral Sciences (The Library of Liberal Arts) by John Stuart Mill, 1965
  9. Utilitarianism, Liberty, and Representative Government (Everyman's Library: Philosophy and Theology, 482A) by John Stuart Mill, 1951
  10. Principles of Political Economy: and Chapters on Socialism (Oxford World's Classics) by John Stuart Mill, 2008-10-15
  11. A System Of Logic Ratiocinative And Inductive Vol 1 of 2 by John Stuart Mill, 2009-06-08
  12. A System of Logic, Ratiocinative and Inductive, Vol. 2 of 2: Being a Connected View of the Principles of Evidence and the Methods of Scientific Investigation (Classic Reprint) by John Stuart Mill, 2010-10-09
  13. Representative Government by John Stuart Mill by John Stuart Mill, 2008-03-04
  14. Autobiography - John Stuart Mill by John Stuart Mill, 2010-02-14

41. John Stuart Mill's Essay On Liberty
john stuart mill s essay On Liberty, which contains a rational justification of the liberty of the individual in opposition to the claims of the state to
http://www.serendipity.li/jsmill/jsmill.htm
John Stuart Mill's Essay On Liberty The renowned essay On Liberty was written by the English philosopher John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) and published in 1859, the year in which Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species was published. On Liberty contains a rational justification of the freedom of the individual in opposition to the claims of the state to impose unlimited control, and has become a classic of libertarian philosophy. In this essay Mill also warns of a second danger to liberty, which democracies are prone to, namely, the tyranny of the majority . In a representative democracy, if you can control the majority (and get them to vote for, and elect, your candidates) then you can control everyone (because your candidates, once "democratically elected", will pass whatever laws are needed for this, as was done by Hitler's agents in the 1930s in Nazi Germany and seems to be happening today in the U.S.A.). Here's what Mill writes in the Introduction to On Liberty about the tyranny of the majority: On Liberty

42. John Stuart Mill
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John Stuart Mill and On Liberty
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43. Mill, John Stuart, 1806-1873: Free Web Books, Online
mill, john stuart (1806–1873). Biographical note. Philosopher, son of James mill, born in London, was ed. by his father with the view of making him the
http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/m/mill/john_stuart/
The University of Adelaide Library eBooks Help
Biographical note Philosopher, son of James Mill, born in London, was ed. by his father with the view of making him the successor of Bentham and himself, as the exponent of the Utilitarian philosophy. In all respects he proved an apt pupil, and by his 15th year had studied classical literature, logic, political economy, and mathematics. In that year he went to France, where he was under the charge of Sir S. Bentham, a brother of Jeremy. His studies had led him to the adoption of the utilitarian philosophy, and after his return he became acquainted with Grote, the Austins, and other Benthamites. Rationale of Judicial Evidence . During the following years he was a frequent contributor to Radical journals, and ed. the London Review . His Logic appeared in 1843, and produced a profound impression; and in 1848 he published Principles of Political Economy . The years between 1858 and 1865 were very productive, his treatises on Liberty Utilitarianism Representative Government , and his being published during this period. In 1865 he entered the House of Commons as one of the members for Westminster, where, though highly respected, he made no great mark. After this political parenthesis he returned to his literary pursuits, and wrote

44. EpistemeLinks: Website Results For Philosopher John Stuart Mill
General website search results for john stuart mill including brief biographies, link resources, and more. Provided by EpistemeLinks.
http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/Philosophers.aspx?PhilCode=Mill

45. John Stuart Mill | Works, Papers And Biography › John Stuart Mill, Economis
john stuart mill, Economist, Economy, Philosopher, Philosophy, Political, Society, Utilitarian, Utilitarianism.
http://www.john-mill.com/
John Stuart Mill, Economist, Economy, Philosopher, Philosophy, Political, Society, Utilitarian, Utilitarianism Skip to content
John Stuart Mill
Sunday, December 9, 2007 John Stuart Mill First published Thu Jan 3, 2002; substantive revision Tue Jul 10, 2007 John Stuart Mill (1806-1873), British philosopher, economist, moral and political theorist, and administrator, was the most influential English-speaking philosopher of the nineteenth century. His views are of continuing significance, and are generally recognized to be among the deepest and certainly the most effective defenses of empiricism and of a liberal political view of society and culture. The overall aim of his philosophy is to develop a positive view of the universe and the place of humans in it, one which contributes to the progress of human knowledge, individual freedom and human well-being. His views are not entirely original, having their roots in the British empiricism of John Locke, George Berkeley and David Hume, and in the utilitarianism of Jeremy Bentham. But he gave them a new depth, and his formulations were sufficiently articulate to gain for them a continuing influence among a broad public. 1. Life

46. Portrait: 'John Stuart Mill' By Richard Reeves | Prospect Magazine May 2006 Issu
john stuart mill mill left no systematic legacy— there is no.
http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=7439

47. 20th WCP: John Stuart Mill And The Ends Of Sport
A paper by David T. Schwartz presented at the 20th World Congress of Philosophy, August, 1998.
http://www.bu.edu/wcp/Papers/Spor/SporSchw.htm
Philosophy of Sport John Stuart Mill and the Ends of Sport David T. Schwartz
Randolph-Macon Woman's College
dschwartz@rmwc.edu
ABSTRACT: Utilitarianism between higher and lower pleasures offers a useful framework for thinking about contemporary sport. This first became apparent while teaching Utilitarianism Mill originally offered the distinction between higher and lower pleasures as a way of defending utilitarianism against critics who found it degrading. Because utilitarianism defines moral rightness solely as the net production of pleasure over pain, critics charged that it portrayed human happiness as no different from the contentment of well-fed barnyard animals. To these critics, any moral theory that cast human life as having no end higher than the pursuit of pleasure was surely "a doctrine worthy only of swine". Mill countered that it was actually the critics of utilitarianism who degraded humanity, for they tacitly assumed that humans were capable of nothing more than animalistic pleasures. Mill maintained happiness is indeed a function of pleasure, although humans are capable of higher forms of pleasure than the other animals. Mill writes Human beings have faculties more elevated than the animal appetites, and when once made conscious of them, do not regard anything as happiness which does not include their gratification.

48. New Statesman - Accidental Hero
For 150 years, john stuart mill has been the intellectual icon of the British left but his ideas address few of the problems we face today.
http://www.newstatesman.com/200712060047
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Accidental hero
David Marquand Published 06 December 2007 For 150 years, John Stuart Mill has been the intellectual icon of the British left - but his ideas address few of the problems we face today. John Stuart Mill has been an iconic figure for British liberals and social democrats for more than 150 years. In his important new biography, Richard Reeves suggests that he has even more to say to the ideology-lite 21st century than he did during the great contest between capitalism and socialism that dominated most of the second half of the 20th, and there is something in it. Mill was one of the great masters whom Gordon Brown celebrated in his speech on British liberty a few weeks ago, and the literature on Mill continues to grow. In the past 25 years, we have had Alan Ryan on Mill, John Gray, John Skorupski, Bernard Semmel, Stefan Collini and Gertrude Himmelfarb, as well as a host of others. Part of the reason is that he was an extraordinarily nice, warm-hearted and intellectually generous man, as well as an extraordinarily gifted one. It is impossible to dislike him. His exemplary life - a paradigm of high Victorian earnestness at its best - still compels affection as well as admiration. His terrifying education, at the hands of a rigid and dogmatic father who seems to have had no sense of humour and no empathy for others, is legendary. He learned the Greek alphabet at three; read Plato (in Greek) at seven; learned Latin at eight; and read Aristotle on logic at 11. Also legendary is his depressive breakdown at 20, when he asked himself whether he would be happier if all the reforms he and his father believed in were achieved, and realised with horror that the answer was "no".

49. John Stuart Mill
The same thought appears in a review of john Herschel s Natural Philosophy, written about the same time. mill remarks that the uncertainty hanging over the
http://www.nndb.com/people/147/000030057/
This is a beta version of NNDB Search: All Names Living people Dead people Band Names Book Titles Movie Titles Full Text for John Stuart Mill Born: 20-May
Birthplace: Pentonville, London, England
Died: 8-May
Location of death: Avignon, France
Cause of death: unspecified
Remains: Buried
Gender: Male
Religion: Agnostic
Race or Ethnicity: White
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Philosopher Economist , Essayist Nationality: England Executive summary: Liberal philosopher and essayist English philosopher and economist, the son of James Mill , born on the 20th of May 1806 in his father's house in Pentonville, London. He was educated exclusively by his father, who was a strict disciplinarian, and at the age of three was taught the Greek alphabet and long lists of Greek words with their English equivalents. By his eighth year he had read Aesop 's Fables , Xenophon's Anabasis , and the whole of Herodotus , and was acquainted with Lucian Isocrates and six dialogues of Plato . He had also read a great deal of history in English William Robertson 's histories, Hume Gibbon , Robert Watson's Philip II and Philip III , Hooke's Roman History , part of a translation of Rollin's Ancient History , Langhorne's Plutarch Gilbert Burnet 's History of My Own Times , thirty volumes of the Annual Register , Miliar's Historical View of the English Government , Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History , McCrie's Knox , and two histories of the Quakers. A contemporary record of Mill's studies from eight to thirteen is published in Bain's sketch of his life. It shows that the

50. Mill, J. S
Secondary Literature M. St john Packe, The Life of john stuart mill (Secker Warburg, 1954); J. M. Robson, The Improvement of Mankind The Social and
http://www.cpm.ehime-u.ac.jp/akamacHomePage/Akamac_E-text_Links/Mill.html

Photo by McMaster University, Canada Mill, J. S
Birthplace London, England.
Posts Held Officer, East India Company, 1823-58.
Offices and Honours MP Westminster, 1865-8.
Publications Books: System of Logic Essays on Some Unsettled Questios of Political Economy Principles of Political Economy On Liberty Utilitarianism Autobiography (1873, 1924); 7. J. S. Mill, Collected Works , 9 vols, ed. J. M. Robson (Univ. Toronto Press, 1963-74).
Career The dominant figure of mid-nineteenth-century British political economy, he was educated by his father James as an ardent Bentham ite utilitarian, but his mental crisis of 1826 induced serious modifications of his views. Saint-Simon, Comte and other writers can be counted as influences subsequent to this period, as can his friendship with his future wife, Harriet Taylor. His System of Logic established his reputation as a major thinker, and it is his philosophical and political writings, most notably On Liberty , that are the chief source of his continuing fame. However, the Principles Jevons felt it necessary to attack him in order to win a favourable hearing for marginal utility economics.

51. Review: John Stuart Mill By Richard Reeves | By Genre | Guardian Unlimited Books
Thomas Hardy once came across john stuart mill canvassing for votes at an openair election meeting in Covent Garden. He stood bare-headed,
http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/biography/0,,2231569,00.html
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52. John Stuart Mill, Speech In Favor Of Capital Punishment
john stuart mill s famous speech explaining why execution is utilitarian.
http://ethics.sandiego.edu/Mill.html
Utilitarianism Egoism Justice Rights Theory ... Ethics Updates ". . . dedicated to promoting the thoughtful discussion of difficult moral issues."
Lawrence M. Hinman

University of San Diego
John Stuart Mill
"Speech In Favor of Capital Punishment" About the Author: John Stuart Mill (1806-73) is one of the foremost representative of utilitarian thought as well as one of the most influential of nineteenth century liberals. Influenced by Harriet Taylor (his wife), Mill developed a very humane version of utilitarianism that was sympathetic to women's rights, labor unions, proportional representation, and other liberal themes. His major works include On Liberty Principles of Political Economy Utilitarianism (1863), and his Autobiography (1873). For more information about John Stuart Mill and utilitarianism, see the Utilitarianism page of Ethics Updates About the Article: This speech was given before Parliament on April 21, 1868 in opposition to a bill banning capital punishment that had been proposed by Mr. Gilpin. For more information about the death penalty, see the Punishment and the Death Penalty page of Ethics Updates As You Read, Consider This:

53. John Stuart Mill, The Utility Of Religion
john stuart mill. It has sometimes been remarked how much has been written, both by friends and enemies, concerning the truth of religion, and how little,
http://www.la.utexas.edu/vmill/three/utilrelig.html
The Utility of Religion
John Stuart Mill
This essential portion of the inquiry into the temporal usefulness of religion, is the subject of the present Essay. It is a part which has been little treated of by sceptical writers. The only direct discussion of it with which I am acquainted, is in a short treatise , understood to have been partly compiled from manuscripts of Mr. Bentham, and abounding in just and profound views; but which, as it appears to me, presses many parts of the argument too hard. This treatise, and the incidental remarks scattered through the writings of M. Comte, are the only sources known to me from which anything very pertinent to the subject can be made available for the sceptical side of the argument. I shall use both of them freely in the sequel of the present discourse. The inquiry divides itself into two parts, corresponding to the double aspect of the subject; its social, and its individual aspect. What does religion do for society, and what for the individual? What amount of benefit to social interests, in the ordinary sense of the phrase, arises from. religious belief? And what influence has it in improving and ennobling individual human nature? The first question is interesting to everybody; the latter only to the best; but to them it is, if there be any difference, the more important of the two. We shall begin with the former, as being that which best admits of being easily brought to a precise issue.

54. John Stuart Mill Quotes
john stuart mill quotes,john, stuart, mill, author, authors, writer, writers, people, famous people.
http://thinkexist.com/quotes/john_stuart_mill/
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55. The John Stuart Mill Bicentennial Conference
Moreover, john stuart mill himself attended UCL to hear the lectures of john Austin, the first Professor of Jurisprudence. It is, therefore, the most
http://www.politicalthought.org.uk/conference/
portrait of Mill courtesy of National Portrait Gallery, London
Student Bursary scheme now available [
The Ninth Conference of the International Society for Utilitarian Studies:
'The John Stuart Mill Bicentennial Conference, 1806-2006'
The Ninth Conference of the International Society for Utilitarian Studie s [ ISUS ] will be held at University College London , scheduled for 5-7 April 2006, to mark the occasion of the bicentenary of the birth of John Stuart Mill (1806-1873). University College London has an intimate connection with the English Utilitarians and Philosophic Radicals. Its foundation owed much to their efforts, and was greatly influenced by their educational philosophy. Moreover, John Stuart Mill himself attended UCL to hear the lectures of John Austin, the first Professor of Jurisprudence. It is, therefore, the most apposite venue for this Conference, which aims to reassess the life, thought and legacy of J. S. Mill and his relevance for the twenty-first century. It is difficult to exaggerate John Stuart Mill's significance and influence. He was not merely an astonishingly versatile thinker who made major contributions to many areas of philosophy. He was also a 'public moralist' and public intellectual

56. English Utilitarians III
The English Utilitarians, Volume 3 john stuart mill. by Leslie Stephen. 1. john stuart mill s Life 2. mill s Logic 3. Politcial Economy 4.
http://www.efm.bris.ac.uk/het/mill/stephen.htm
The English Utilitarians, Volume 3: John Stuart Mill
by Leslie Stephen

57. John Stuart Mill And Liberal Imperialism
See Joseph Hamburger, john stuart mill on Liberty and Control (Oxford Oxford University Press, 1999), which is very thorough, even if Hamburger doesn t
http://www.antiwar.com/stromberg/s051802.html
The
Old
Cause
by
Joseph R.
Stromberg
May 18, 2002
John Stuart Mill and Liberal Imperialism
I n my last column, I told some of the story of Cold War liberalism. Today, I want to look at a similar phenomenon, one which might be considered a forerunner of Cold War liberalism. That phenomenon is liberal imperialism. The fact that there is such an historical category already suggests that "liberalism" was, from a very early time, a thing of sliding definitions and declensions. For my purposes, liberalism has to do with individual liberty, free markets, and free trade. If that makes it sound a lot like libertarianism, so be it. Others may deploy their own notions of what constitutes the essential liberal tradition. JOHN STUART MILL (1806-1873) J . S. Mill was born to English liberalism. His father James, was an ardent laissez faireist, wheel-horse of the "philsophical radicals," and a follower of the utilitarian philosophy of Jeremy Bentham, whom Edmund Burke, with sound instinct, detested. The young Mill started his study of ancient Greek at age three, but that was not the source of his problems. John Stuart worked many years as part of the bureaucracy governing India. He served in Parliament. His writings covered philosophy, political economy, politics, and whatever it came into his head to write on.

58. Representative Government
1861 REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT by john stuart mill PREFACE PREFACE. THOSE who have done me the honour of reading my previous writings will probably receive
http://philosophy.eserver.org/mill-representative-govt.txt

59. BBC - Radio 4 In Our Time - Home Page
The 19th Century philosopher john stuart mill believed that, The true philosophy is the marriage of poetry and logic . He was one of the first thinkers to
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime_20060518.shtml
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Thursday 18 May 2006 JOHN STUART MILL  Find out more about this subject by going to our research page The 19th Century philosopher John Stuart Mill believed that, 'The true philosophy is the marriage of poetry and logic'. He was one of the first thinkers to argue that a social theory must engage with ideas of culture and the internal life. He used Wordsworth to inform his social theory, he was a proto feminist and his treatise On Liberty is one of the sacred texts of liberalism. J S Mill believed that action was the natural articulation of thought. He battled throughout his life for social reform and individual freedom and was hugely influential in the extension of the vote. Few modern discussions on race, birth control, the state and human rights have not been influenced by Mill's theories.

60. Quoteland :: Quotations By Author
john stuart mill, On Liberty, Chapter 2 Of the liberty of thought and discussion, 1859 Click here for more information about john stuart mill
http://www.quoteland.com/author.asp?AUTHOR_ID=151

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