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  1.  11
    Charles darwins liberalism in natural selection as affecting civilised nations.David Stack - 2012 - History of Political Thought 33 (3):525-554.
    This article reassesses 'Natural Selection as affecting Civilised Nations': a thirteen-page section in the first volume of The Descent of Man (1871) often assumed to be problematic for those who wish to emphasize Darwin's liberal credentials. For hismost virulent critics the section connects Darwin to eugenics and the Nazi Holocaust. Even his admirers tend to view it as symptomatic of Darwin succumbing to a more conservative politics. This article demonstrates, through a delineation of the intellectual context and a close reading (...)
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  2.  19
    Charles Darwin and the scientific mind.David Stack - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Science 52 (1):85-115.
    Although often presented as an essential, ahistorical or innate psychological entity, the notion of a ‘scientific mind’ is ripe for historical analysis. The growing historical interest in the self-fashioning of masculine identities, and more particularly the self-fashioning of the nineteenth-century scientist, has opened up a space in which to probe what was understood by someone being said to possess a ‘scientific mind’. This task is made all the more urgent by the recently revived interest of some psychologists in the concept (...)
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    The Afterlife of John Stuart Mill, 1874–1879.David Stack - 2016 - In Christopher Macleod & Dale E. Miller (eds.), A Companion to Mill. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.. pp. 30–44.
    This chapter traces Mill's reputation in the newspaper and periodical press in the his ‘afterlife’: the period between the posthumous publication of his Three Essays on Religion (1879) and his final book, Chapters on Socialism (1879). This period saw a decisive narrowing in the range and breadth of Mill's appeal, but not the rapid fall from favour that is often assumed. Questions of religion, character, and politics were multi‐layered and interrelated, and combined to leave posterity with a diminished and distorted (...)
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    Harriet Taylor Mill Harriet Taylor Mill, by Helen McCabe, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, Elements on Women in the History of Philosophy, 2023, 78pp., £17.00(paperback and digital), ISBN 978-1-009-15683-7. [REVIEW]David Stack - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    This short and engaging study of Harriet Taylor Mill is a welcome addition to the excellent Cambridge Elements: Women in the History of Philosophy series. Helen McCabe’s contention in the introduct...
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