Scottish Philosophy After the Enlightenment: Essays in Pursuit of a Tradition

Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (2022)
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Abstract

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. Gordon 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. Graham concludes by considering the relation between the Scottish philosophical tradition and the 20th-century philosopher John Macmurray.

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Gordon Graham
Durham University

Citations of this work

Scottish Philosophy in the 19th Century.Gordon Graham - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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