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Full Description
Beginning with Sir William Hamilton's revitalisation of philosophy in Scotland in the 1830s, Gordon Graham takes up the theme of George Davie's The Democratic Intellect and explores a century of debates surrounding the identity and continuity of the Scottish philosophical tradition. Graham identifies a host of once-prominent but now neglected thinkers - such as Alexander Bain, J. F. Ferrier, Thomas Carlyle, Alexander Campbell Fraser, John Tulloch, Henry Jones, Henry Calderwood, David Ritchie and Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison - whose reactions to Hume and Reid stimulated new currents of ideas. He concludes by considering the relation between the Scottish philosophical tradition and the 20th-century philosopher John Macmurray.
Contents
A Note on Women in Scottish Philosophy: Mrs OliphantChronology of Scottish Philosophy after the Enlightenment
An Autobiographical Prologue
Sir William Hamilton and the Revitalisation of Scottish Philosophy
James Frederick Ferrier and the Course of Scottish Philosophy
Psychology and Moral Philosophy: Alexander Bain
Thomas Carlyle and the Philosophy of Rhetoric
Hegelianism and its Critics
Scottish Philosophy's Progress
Religion, Evolution and Scottish Philosophy
The Gifford Lectures and the Re-affirmation of Theism: Alexander Campbell Fraser
The Culmination of Scottish Philosophy: A S Pringle-Pattison
John Macmurray and the Self as Agent
BibliographyIndex