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From Logic to Liberty: Theories of Knowledge in Two Works of John Stuart Mill

Version 2 2024-06-18, 05:29
Version 1 2023-02-03, 03:43
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 05:29 authored by S Jacobs
This paper is designed to reinterpret and clarify John Stuart Mill's ideas on science. Past discussions of these ideas strike me as unsatisfactory in two crucial respects. In the first place they have encouraged us to regard Mill's principal work on epistemology, A System of Logic, as fundamentally inductivist This is the received interpretation of Mill's Logic and one finds it summarized and affirmed in the remark of Laurens Laudan that 'by and large' Mill was 'a rather orthodox inductivist who saw science as the generalisation of observation and who argued that all scientific ideas (including those of mathematics) come directly from experience.

History

Journal

Canadian Journal of Philosophy

Volume

16

Pagination

751-767

ISSN

0045-5091

eISSN

1911-0820

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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