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Miscellaneous Writings: Volume XXXI (Collected Works of John Stuart Mill)
โ Scribed by John Stuart Mill, John Robson (editor)
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 513
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The interests and activities of John Stuart Mill (1806-73) were so wide-ranging that even the varied subjects of thirty previously published volumes of Collected Works cannot encompass them all. In this volume are brought together diverse and interesting instances of his polymathic career, none before republished and some previously unpublished.
Neatly framing Mill's writing career are his editorial prefaces and extensive notes to Jeremy Bentham;s Rationale of Judicial Evidence (1827) and James Mill's Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind (1869). Both demonstrate his extraordinary powers of mind and diligence as well as his fealty. His constant avocation, field botany, is shown in his botanical writings, which open a window on an almost unknown activity that sustained and delighted him. Brief comments on two medical works hint at another interest. Two articles of which he was co-author demonstrate his work as editor of the London and Westminster Review, and a calendar of his contributions to the Political Economy Club provides yet another glimpse into his chosen activities and concerns. Published for the first time are Mill's English and French wills, providing still further biographical detail.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
Editions of Jeremy Bentham and James Mill, 1827 and 1869
Jeremy Bentham's Rationale of Judicial Evidence (1827)
James Mill's Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind (1869)
Botanical Writings, 1840โ61
Calendar of Odours (1840)
Rare Plants in West Surrey (1841)
Isatis Tinctoria (1841)
Notes on Plants Growing in the Neighbourhood of Guildford, Surrey (1841)
Cnicus Forsteri (1841)
Additional Guildford Stations (1841)
Polygonum Dumetorum (1841)
Rarer Plants of the Isle of Wight (1841)
Corrections and Additions in Mr. Mill's List of Plants in the Isle of Wight (1842)
The Phytologist; a Botanical Magazine (1843)
Notes on the Species of Oenanthe (1845)
Correction of an Error in the "Notes on the Species of Oenanthe" (1845)
Observations on Isatis Tinctoria and Other Plants (1856)
Plants Growing Wild in the District of Luxford's Reigate Flora (1856)
Note on West Surrey Plants (1856)
Reigate Plants (1856)
Plants Growing on and near Blackheath (1857)
Late (Early?) Flowering Plants (1858)
Hutchinsia Petraea (1858)
Leucojum Aestivum (1858)
Clifton Plants (1858)
Plants on Sherborn Sands, Blackheath, and Other Stations (1858)
Some Derbyshire Plants (1858)
Linaria Purpurea (1858)
Faversham Plants (1858)
Lepidium Ruderale (1859)
Wallflower Growing on the Living Rock (1860)
Spring Flowers of the South of Europe (1860)
Botany of Spain (1861โ62)
Verbascum Thapsiforme (1862)
Medical Reviews, 1834 and 1842
Dr. King's Lecture on Anatomy (1834)
Carpenter's Physiology (1842)
APPENDICES
Appendix A. Wills and Deed of Gift (1853โ72)
Appendix B. The Vixen, and Circassia (1837)
Appendix C. The Spanish Question (1837)
Appendix D. Questions before the Select Committee on Metropolitan Local Government (1867)
Appendix E. Mill at the Political Economy Club
Appendix F. Textual Emendations
Appendix G. Index of Persons and Works
INDEX
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
Z
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><span>One of the constant fascinations Mill holds for the general public as well as scholars derives from the early flowering of his genius. This development is seen in detail in the journal and notebook he kept in France during his fifteenth year, and in the debating speeches and walking-tour jo