Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)

This is a volume in the Oxford series A History of Scottish Philosophy. Its scope is quite broad, as its subtitle’s reference to “morals, politics, art, [and] religion” hints. The volume’s editors, Aaron Garrett (Boston University) and James Harris (University of St. Andrews), are recognized authori...

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Main Author: Spencer, Mark G.
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137555
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1375552021-05-10T06:04:11Z Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review) Spencer, Mark G. School of Humanities Humanities::Literature::English This is a volume in the Oxford series A History of Scottish Philosophy. Its scope is quite broad, as its subtitle’s reference to “morals, politics, art, [and] religion” hints. The volume’s editors, Aaron Garrett (Boston University) and James Harris (University of St. Andrews), are recognized authorities in the field, and they have assembled an expert team of contributors who together have delivered a very useful volume, if one that is sometimes uneven in coverage. The contributors are notably interdisciplinary. In fact, while the book’s co-editors are philosophers, only a minority of the thirteen contributors (among whom the editors are counted) are from philosophy departments. Six of the thirteen are from departments of history, but English literature and political science are also represented. This lineup is not accidental; it reflects the intention of the editors, who point out in their introductory chapter that “it is a peculiar feature of the history of philosophy that it is written primarily by philosophers” (2). The result is that “usually the history of philosophy is the work of those who are philosophers first and historians second” (2). The editors’ choice of authors suggests a different, more historical, approach, something also evident in the volume’s content. Published version 2020-04-01T07:20:30Z 2020-04-01T07:20:30Z 2019 Journal Article Spencer, M. G. (2019). Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review). Studies in Religion and the Enlightenment 1, no. 2 (fall 2019): 28-32. doi: 10.32655/srej.2019.2.8 2661-3336 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137555 10.32655/srej.2019.2.8 2 1 28 32 en Studies in Religion and the Enlightenment © 2019 Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, & the Brigham Young University Faculty Publishing Service. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Literature::English
spellingShingle Humanities::Literature::English
Spencer, Mark G.
Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)
description This is a volume in the Oxford series A History of Scottish Philosophy. Its scope is quite broad, as its subtitle’s reference to “morals, politics, art, [and] religion” hints. The volume’s editors, Aaron Garrett (Boston University) and James Harris (University of St. Andrews), are recognized authorities in the field, and they have assembled an expert team of contributors who together have delivered a very useful volume, if one that is sometimes uneven in coverage. The contributors are notably interdisciplinary. In fact, while the book’s co-editors are philosophers, only a minority of the thirteen contributors (among whom the editors are counted) are from philosophy departments. Six of the thirteen are from departments of history, but English literature and political science are also represented. This lineup is not accidental; it reflects the intention of the editors, who point out in their introductory chapter that “it is a peculiar feature of the history of philosophy that it is written primarily by philosophers” (2). The result is that “usually the history of philosophy is the work of those who are philosophers first and historians second” (2). The editors’ choice of authors suggests a different, more historical, approach, something also evident in the volume’s content.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Spencer, Mark G.
format Article
author Spencer, Mark G.
author_sort Spencer, Mark G.
title Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)
title_short Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)
title_full Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)
title_fullStr Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)
title_full_unstemmed Scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : Volume I : morals, politics, art, religion edited by Aaron Garrett and James A. Harris (Review)
title_sort scottish philosophy in the eighteenth century : volume i : morals, politics, art, religion edited by aaron garrett and james a. harris (review)
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137555
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