On Bentham and Coleridge

by John Stuart Mill

Paperback, 1962

Status

Available

Call number

192

Collection

Publication

Harper Torchbooks (1962), Paperback, 168 pages

Description

John Stuart Mill described Bentham and Coleridge as 'the two great seminal minds' of early nineteenth-century England. Coleridge, who asserted the primacy of the transcendent imagination, was in a obvious sense the direct opposite of Bentham, the resolute proponent of Utilitarianism but Mill, while recognizing the separateness of their creeds, appreciated both and saw both as necessary to the intellectual vigour of the nation. Mill's major essays on Bentham and Coleridge were first published in The Westminster Review, in 1838 and 1840 respectively. In this substantial introduction to them here F.R. Leavis argues that they are essential documents for an understanding of Victorian culture he traces their influence on the thinking of Dickens, George Eliot and Matthew Arnold, and examines their significance for contemporary principles of liberal education.… (more)

Language

ISBN

none

Local notes

Torchbooks TB 1070
Page: 0.2382 seconds