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Journals and Debating Speeches : Volumes XXVI-XXVII / John Stuart Mill; ed. by John Robson.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Collected Works of John Stuart MillPublisher: Toronto : University of Toronto Press, [1988]Copyright date: ©1988Description: 1 online resource (832 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781442680814
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 192 20/eng/20231120
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- INTRODUCTION -- TEXTUAL INTRODUCTION -- France, 1820-21 -- 1. Journal and Notebook of a Year in France -- 2. Traité de Logique (1820-21) -- 3. Lecture Notes on Logic (1820-21) -- Debating Speeches, 1823-29 -- 4. The Utility of Knowledge -- 5. Parliamentary Reform [1] (Aug. 1824) -- 6. Parliamentary Reform [2] (Aug. 1824) -- 7. Population: Proaemium (1825) -- 8. Population (1825) -- 9. Population: Reply to Thirlwall (1825) -- 10. Cooperation: First Speech (1825) -- 11. Cooperation: Intended Speech (1825) -- 12. Cooperation: Closing Speech (1825) -- 13. Cooperation: Notes (1825) -- 14. Influence of the Aristocracy (9 Dec., 1825) -- 15. Primogeniture (20 Jan., 1826) -- 16. Catiline's Conspiracy (28 Feb., 1826) -- 17. The Universities [1] (7 Apr., 1826) -- 18. The Universities [2] (7 Apr., 1826) -- 19. The British Constitution [1] (19 May?, 1826) -- 20. The British Constitution [2] (19 May, 1826) -- 21. The Influence of Lawyers (30 Mar., 1827?) -- 22. The Use of History (1827) -- 23. The Coalition Ministry (29 June, 1827) -- 24. The Present State of Literature (16 Nov., 1827) -- 25. The Church (15 Feb., 1828) -- 26. Perfectibility (2 May, 1828) -- 27. Wordsworth and Byron (30 Jan., 1829) -- 28. Montesquieu (3 Apr., 1829) -- Walking Tours, 1827-32 -- 29. Walking Tour of Sussex -- 30. Walking Tour of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Surrey (3-15 July, 1828) -- 31. Walking Tour of Yorkshire and the Lake District (July-Aug. 1831) -- 32. Walking Tour of Hampshire, West Sussex, and the Isle of Wight (19 July-6 Aug., 1832) -- 33. Walking Tour of Cornwall (3-9 Oct., 1832) -- Diary, 1854 -- 34. Diary -- APPENDICES -- Appendix A. The Manuscripts -- Appendix B. Journal and Notebook: Ancillary Materials (1820-21) -- Appendix C. Textual Emendations -- Appendix D. Index of Persons and Works Cited -- INDEX
Summary: One of the constant fascinations Mill holds for the general public as well as scholars derives from the early flowering of his genius. This development is seen in detail in the journal and notebook he kept in France during his fifteenth year, and in the debating speeches and walking-tour journals dating from his eighteenth to twenty-fourth years. This was the period when he first adopted Benthamism as 'a religion,' worked intensively as a propagandist for the faith, and then began the painful reassessment that led to his independent mature thought and action. Some of the results of that reassessment are seen in the diary entries from 1854, written for his wife, which reveal in personal form many of their most passionately held ideas. These materials have never before been gathered, and almost all appear here for the first time in scholarly form. They throw light on contemporary social interests and behavior, and will encourage new assessments of Mill’s life and thought. The texts, the great majority drawn from manuscripts, are presented in critical form, collated, with explanatory and textual notes. The Introduction gives the personal and historical context, with an analysis of content and rhetoric; the Textual Introduction supplies information about the nature and history of the documents, while Appendices provide ancillary materials. Both bibliographic and analytic indexes are included.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - DeGruyter (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (dgr)9781442680814

Frontmatter -- Contents -- INTRODUCTION -- TEXTUAL INTRODUCTION -- France, 1820-21 -- 1. Journal and Notebook of a Year in France -- 2. Traité de Logique (1820-21) -- 3. Lecture Notes on Logic (1820-21) -- Debating Speeches, 1823-29 -- 4. The Utility of Knowledge -- 5. Parliamentary Reform [1] (Aug. 1824) -- 6. Parliamentary Reform [2] (Aug. 1824) -- 7. Population: Proaemium (1825) -- 8. Population (1825) -- 9. Population: Reply to Thirlwall (1825) -- 10. Cooperation: First Speech (1825) -- 11. Cooperation: Intended Speech (1825) -- 12. Cooperation: Closing Speech (1825) -- 13. Cooperation: Notes (1825) -- 14. Influence of the Aristocracy (9 Dec., 1825) -- 15. Primogeniture (20 Jan., 1826) -- 16. Catiline's Conspiracy (28 Feb., 1826) -- 17. The Universities [1] (7 Apr., 1826) -- 18. The Universities [2] (7 Apr., 1826) -- 19. The British Constitution [1] (19 May?, 1826) -- 20. The British Constitution [2] (19 May, 1826) -- 21. The Influence of Lawyers (30 Mar., 1827?) -- 22. The Use of History (1827) -- 23. The Coalition Ministry (29 June, 1827) -- 24. The Present State of Literature (16 Nov., 1827) -- 25. The Church (15 Feb., 1828) -- 26. Perfectibility (2 May, 1828) -- 27. Wordsworth and Byron (30 Jan., 1829) -- 28. Montesquieu (3 Apr., 1829) -- Walking Tours, 1827-32 -- 29. Walking Tour of Sussex -- 30. Walking Tour of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Surrey (3-15 July, 1828) -- 31. Walking Tour of Yorkshire and the Lake District (July-Aug. 1831) -- 32. Walking Tour of Hampshire, West Sussex, and the Isle of Wight (19 July-6 Aug., 1832) -- 33. Walking Tour of Cornwall (3-9 Oct., 1832) -- Diary, 1854 -- 34. Diary -- APPENDICES -- Appendix A. The Manuscripts -- Appendix B. Journal and Notebook: Ancillary Materials (1820-21) -- Appendix C. Textual Emendations -- Appendix D. Index of Persons and Works Cited -- INDEX

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One of the constant fascinations Mill holds for the general public as well as scholars derives from the early flowering of his genius. This development is seen in detail in the journal and notebook he kept in France during his fifteenth year, and in the debating speeches and walking-tour journals dating from his eighteenth to twenty-fourth years. This was the period when he first adopted Benthamism as 'a religion,' worked intensively as a propagandist for the faith, and then began the painful reassessment that led to his independent mature thought and action. Some of the results of that reassessment are seen in the diary entries from 1854, written for his wife, which reveal in personal form many of their most passionately held ideas. These materials have never before been gathered, and almost all appear here for the first time in scholarly form. They throw light on contemporary social interests and behavior, and will encourage new assessments of Mill’s life and thought. The texts, the great majority drawn from manuscripts, are presented in critical form, collated, with explanatory and textual notes. The Introduction gives the personal and historical context, with an analysis of content and rhetoric; the Textual Introduction supplies information about the nature and history of the documents, while Appendices provide ancillary materials. Both bibliographic and analytic indexes are included.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 02. Jun 2024)