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73Stephen Cowley, Rational Piety and Social Reform in Glasgow: The Life, Philosophy, and Political Economy of James MylneJournal of Scottish Philosophy 14 (2): 172-174. 2016.
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130: Stephen Buckle (ed.), Hume's Enquiry concerning Human Understanding (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) Cambridge University Press 2007 pp 232 + xli ISBN 0-521-60403-6 ; David Womersley (ed.), Liberty and American Experience in the Eighteenth Century, Indianapolis, Liberty Fund 2006 ISBN 0-86597-629- (review)Journal of Scottish Philosophy 5 (2): 229-230. 2007.Stephen Buckle , Hume's Enquiry concerning Human Understanding Cambridge University Press 2007 pp 232 + xli ISBN 0-521-60403-6 David Womersley , Liberty and American Experience in the Eighteenth Century, Indianapolis, Liberty Fund 2006 ISBN 0-86597-629-5
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180Adam Ferguson: History, Progress and Human Nature, edited by Eugene Heath and Vincenzo Merolle, London: Pickering and Chatto. 2008. 253pp. H/b. $99. ISBN 978-1-85196-864-0 (review)Journal of Scottish Philosophy 7 (1): 107-111. 2009.
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92Review of Jeffry H. Morrison: John Witherspoon and the Founding of the American RepublicJournal of Scottish Philosophy 3 (2): 190-193. 2005.
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116David Fordyce ,The Elements of Moral Philosophy with a Brief Account of the Nature, Progress, and Origin of Philosophy, with an introduction by Thomas D. Kennedy, Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2003. xvii + 212 pp. Paperback, £8.95. ISBN: 0-86597-390-3Journal of Scottish Philosophy 2 (1): 100-101. 2004.
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98Review: Thomas Reid: Essays on the Active Powers of ManJournal of Scottish Philosophy 9 (2): 253-254. 2011.
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51Nicholas B. Miller, John Millar and the Scottish Enlightenment: Family Life and World HistoryJournal of Scottish Philosophy 16 (3): 283-286. 2018.
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45Philosophy, History and Politics: Studies in Contemporary English Philosophy of HistoryPhilosophical Quarterly 28 (111): 178-179. 1978.
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21Nature, Kant, and GodIn Govert J. Buijs & Annette K. Mosher (eds.), The Future of Creation Order: Vol. 2, Order Among Humans: Humanities, Social Science and Normative Practices, Springer Verlag. pp. 85-99. 2018.This paper draws on some lines of thought in Kant’s Critique of Judgment to construct an aesthetic counterpart to the moral argument for the existence of God that Kant formulates in the Critique of Practical Reason. The paper offers this aesthetic version as a theistic way of explaining how the natural world can be thought valuable independently of human desires and purposes. It further argues that such an argument must commend itself to anyone who is as deeply committed to the preservation of n…Read more
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Ch. 7. Hamilton, Scottish common sense, and the philosophy of the conditionedIn W. J. Mander (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of British Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century, Oxford University Press. 2014.
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14Philosophy, Knowledge, and UnderstandingIn Stephen Robert Grimm (ed.), Making Sense of the World: New Essays on the Philosophy of Understanding, Oxford University Press. pp. 98-115. 2017.This chapter begins with the unfavorable comparison that has often been made between the substantial progress the natural and social sciences have made, and the interminable and inconclusive debates that philosophers engage in. It examines the Humean attempt to make philosophy more scientific and the Lockean conception of philosophy as an “under-labourer for the sciences. It argues instead for a conception of philosophy as the pursuit of cognitive goals other than the kind of knowledge and expla…Read more
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5Was Reid a moral realist?In Charles Bradford Bow (ed.), Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment, Oxford University Press. pp. 37-56. 2018.This chapter argues that, contrary to a very widely held view, Reid’s express disagreement with Hume on the matter of morality cannot satisfactorily be pressed into the “realism _versus_ sentimentalism” dichotomy. Hume is certainly a sentimentalist, but there is good reason to interpret Reid’s use of the analogy between moral sense and sense perception in a way that does not imply the existence of “real” moral properties. Reid makes judgment central to the analogy, and this gives the exercise of…Read more