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Politics : Moderate Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bridge Player who wrote (102)4/11/2003 5:11:29 PM
From: Dale Baker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 20773
 
Mill lived from 1806-1873, an age of "limited wars" within the Congress of Vienna rules.

Imagine if he had seen World War I. Where would his naive romanticism been then? And what do you say to the thousands who made themselves targets for US firepower in the past few weeks, all for the sake of a tyrant? What were they fighting and dying for?

Is war always as noble as a half-ass philosopher paints it? How many wars did Mill ever fight? He was a limp little politician who wrote a few dense treatises.

And he chose to retire and die in France. Go figure:

His first great intellectual work was his System of Logic, R atiocinative and Inductive, which appeared in 1843. This was followed, in due course by his Essays on some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy (1844), and Principles of Political Economy (1848). In 1859 appeared his little treatise On Liberty, and his Thoughts on Parliamentary Reform. His Considerations on Representative Government belongs to the year 1860; and in 1863 (after first appearing in magazine form) came his Utilitarianism. In the Parliament of 1865-68, he sat as Radical member for Westminister. He advocated three major things in the House of Commonswomen suffrage, the interests of the laboring classes, and land reform in Ireland. In 1865, came his Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy; in 1867, his Rectorial Inaugural Address at St. Andrews University, on the value of culture; in 1868, his pamphlet on England and Ireland; and in 1869, his treatise on The Subjection of Women. Also in 1869, his edition of his father's Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind was published. Mill died at Avignon in 1873. After his death were published his Autobiography (1873) and Three Essays on Religion: Nature, the Utility of Religion, and Theism (1874), written between 1830 and 1870.