The Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment [Book Review]

Hume Studies 30 (2):416-418 (2004)
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Abstract

This book is explicitly about ideas canvassed during the Scottish Enlightenment, albeit with some preliminary attempt to anchor them in their original historical and social contexts. The editor insists on a distinctively Scottish dimension to the ideas discussed, and claims that the book tackles central issues from three viewpoints: the first emphasizes the social sciences, the second the natural sciences, and the third is more loosely inclusive, aiming to be more holistic and arguably describable as “cultural.” There is nothing on technological ideas nor, in most cases, on how ideas were excited or modified by the ideas and practices in operation at the time.

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Peter E. T. Jones
Carleton College

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Select Bibliography.[author unknown] - 1992 - Chinese Studies in Philosophy 23:258-271.
Select Bibliography.[author unknown] - 1996 - In James Schmidt (ed.), What is Enlightenment?: Eighteenth-Century Answers and Twentieth-Century Questions. University of California Press. pp. 537-554.

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