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Series Editor's Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2016

Gordon Graham
Affiliation:
Center for the Study of Scottish Philosophy
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Summary

It is widely acknowledged that the Scottish Enlightenment of the eighteenth century was one of the most fertile periods in British intellectual history, and that philosophy was the jewel in its crown. Yet, vibrant though this period was, it occurred within a long history that began with the creation of the Scottish universities in the fifteenth century. It also stretched into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries for as long as those universities continued to be a culturally distinctive and socially connected system of education and inquiry.

While the Scottish Enlightenment remains fertile ground for philosophical and historical investigation, these other four centuries of philosophy also warrant intellectual exploration. The purpose of this series is to maintain outstanding scholarly study of great thinkers like David Hume, Adam Smith and Thomas Reid, alongside sustained exploration of the less familiar figures who preceded them, and the impressive company of Scottish philosophers, once celebrated, now neglected, who followed them.

Mr Hume is a very subtile man himself and believed to be allowed the help of lawyers. Whenever a trial is made the supporters of the overture will perhaps find more than they imagine att present how much such subtile men can puzzle & perplex. They will have a particular advantage in having Mr Hume's writings for their text for this Gentleman, having so much of the sceptick in him, rarely admitts any thing on any one side of a Question but he finds out something to plead for the other. This humour appears in his Philosophy, Divinity, History, & every thing else.

Robert Wallace (quoted in Mossner 1980: 350)
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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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