Sociability, Luxury and Sympathy: The Case of Archibald Campbell

History of European Ideas 39 (6):791-814 (2013)
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Abstract

The eighteenth-century moral philosopher Archibald Campbell is now largely forgotten, even to specialists in the Scottish Enlightenment. Yet his work is worth recovering both as part of the immediate reception of Bernard Mandeville and Francis Hutcheson's rival moral philosophies, and for better understanding the state of Scottish moral philosophy a decade before David Hume published his Treatise of Human Nature. This paper offers a reading of Campbell as deploying a specifically Epicurean philosophy that resists both the Augustinianism of Mandeville, and the Stoicism of Hutcheson. This leads him onto ground later claimed more conclusively by Hume, whilst helping us to better conceptualise the deployment and recovery of Hellenistic thought in the early modern period

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Citations of this work

Mandeville on the origins of virtue.Robin Douglass - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (2):276-295.
The dark side of recognition: Bernard Mandeville and the morality of pride.Robin Douglass - 2021 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 32 (2):284-300.

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References found in this work

Hume and Hutcheson.James Moore - 1995 - In M. A. Stewart & John P. Wright (eds.), Hume and Hume's Connexions. pp. 23-57.

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