STUNNING Walk up Calton Hill to the
Dugald Stewart Monument and take in the view
(17) La National Library of Scotland posee en sus (ondos un total de 113 volumenes (muchos reediciones) de
Dugald Stewart. Entre las reediciones mas recientes de sus trabajos se cuentan British Linguistics of the 19th Century (Londres: Routledge, 1994) Y The Collected Works of
Dugald Stewart (Bristol: Thoemrnes Press, 1994).
Les allegeances de Jouffroy allaient aux philosophes ecossais
Dugald Stewart et Thomas Reid, qui avaient ete, selon lui, les premiers a faire de la psychologie une science independante.
Students learned about the moderate Enlightenment by reading selections from Locke;
Dugald Stewart and other Scottish common-sense philosophers; and Vattel and other continental natural-law writers.
Significantly, the European authors whom Holified cites (accurately) as being most influential in the early United States featured natural theology (Paley), epistemology (Locke, along with
Dugald Stewart), or antideist apologetics (Butler).
The emphasis on subjective feeling and sentiment in these philosophers did not monopolize Emerson's early thinking on issues of morality and ethics, since the Common Sense thinkers Thomas Reid and
Dugald Stewart alternatively argued for a more rational grounding of man's moral faculties.
Its leading figures included the philosophers Adam Ferguson, Francis Hutcheson, Adam Smith, John Millar,
Dugald Stewart, Thomas Reid, and David Hume and the historian William Robertson.
The first medical officer due to be parachuted into Yugoslavia was
Dugald Stewart Macphail, who was born in Glasgow in 1913 and studied medicine at St Andrews.
Relying heavily on Thomas Weiskel's 1976 study The Romantic Sublime, this looks like a rather old-fashioned claim, overlooking the fact that British aesthetic discourse in the period was more likely to be based on the associationist epistemology of David Hartley, Archibald Alison and
Dugald Stewart than on Kantian idealism, relatively little known beyond the Coleridge circle.
Cloth, $95.00--Contrary to the estimation of Reid's close friend and admiring biographer,
Dugald Stewart, the correspondence of Thomas Reid is of great interest.
Dugald Stewart, in his biography of Smith, talks of this influence:
His early chapters trace this connection between philology and irony through a host of European influences such as John Locke, Etienne Condillac, George Berkeley, Charles de Brosses, Antoine Court De Gebelin, and Horne Tooke, with special emphasis on the Scottish Common Sense philosophers (Thomas Reid, Hugh Blair,
Dugald Stewart) and on German philosophy (Johann von Herder and Friedrich Schlegel).