This paper seeks to establish that Bernard Mandeville's ideas on courage and honour shaped the Scottish debate about ancients and moderns by formulating a perspective how eighteenth-century civil societies grew large, luxurious and feminine without losing their ability to wage war. My focus is on Mandeville's positive influence on David Hume, whose writings were a springboard for many Mandevillean ideas in Scotland. In contrast to a recent claim in scholarship, Hume aimed to discredit, instead of developing, Shaftesburyan ideas of ancient courage. The concluding part of the paper will discuss Andrew Millar and Adam Ferguson in this context.Peer reviewe
As commercial society began to emerge in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe, it was widely t...
In his Treatise of Human Nature, David Hume offers an elaborate account of the origins of property a...
This work offers a novel interpretation of David Hume’s (1711–1776) conception of the conjectural de...
This paper seeks to establish that Bernard Mandeville's ideas on courage and honour shaped the Scott...
The Fable of the bees and the Treatise of human nature were written to define and dissect the essent...
Pride has been a problematic passion in many moral systems for it has been seen as having harmful co...
The subject of this paper is the place of Hume in Nicholas Phillipson's account of the Scottish Enli...
David Hume has been largely read as a philosopher but not as a scientist. In this article I discuss ...
This article reconstructs a significant historical alternative to the theories of ‘cosmopolitan’ or ...
David Hume has been largely read as a philosopher but not as a scientist. In this article I discuss ...
In this study, I assert that prior to the French Revolution, early eighteenth-century Gothic works s...
In this paper I scrutinize three sets of passages by David Hume. The first is from the Introduction ...
This article examines when and how the ‘Defective’ version of the Book of Sir John Mandeville came t...
In this dissertation I examine Hume’s secular re-definition and re-evaluation of the traditional Chr...
This paper examines the view that while in A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-40) Hume presents himsel...
As commercial society began to emerge in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe, it was widely t...
In his Treatise of Human Nature, David Hume offers an elaborate account of the origins of property a...
This work offers a novel interpretation of David Hume’s (1711–1776) conception of the conjectural de...
This paper seeks to establish that Bernard Mandeville's ideas on courage and honour shaped the Scott...
The Fable of the bees and the Treatise of human nature were written to define and dissect the essent...
Pride has been a problematic passion in many moral systems for it has been seen as having harmful co...
The subject of this paper is the place of Hume in Nicholas Phillipson's account of the Scottish Enli...
David Hume has been largely read as a philosopher but not as a scientist. In this article I discuss ...
This article reconstructs a significant historical alternative to the theories of ‘cosmopolitan’ or ...
David Hume has been largely read as a philosopher but not as a scientist. In this article I discuss ...
In this study, I assert that prior to the French Revolution, early eighteenth-century Gothic works s...
In this paper I scrutinize three sets of passages by David Hume. The first is from the Introduction ...
This article examines when and how the ‘Defective’ version of the Book of Sir John Mandeville came t...
In this dissertation I examine Hume’s secular re-definition and re-evaluation of the traditional Chr...
This paper examines the view that while in A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-40) Hume presents himsel...
As commercial society began to emerge in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe, it was widely t...
In his Treatise of Human Nature, David Hume offers an elaborate account of the origins of property a...
This work offers a novel interpretation of David Hume’s (1711–1776) conception of the conjectural de...