The Glasgow Enlightenment  
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ISBN: 9781788854849
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The Glasgow Enlightenment is widely regarded as the first book to explore the nature and accomplishments of the Enlightenment in eighteenth-century Glasgow in a comprehensive manner. In addition to a general introduction by the editors, there are seven chapters devoted to Glasgow University professors, such as Adam Smith, Francis Hutcheson, Thomas Reid, John Millar, William Leechman, and John Anderson. At a time when the Glasgow economy was booming in the strength of its trade with America, these and other Glasgow men of science and learning were making major contributions to the European world of philosophy, law, political economy, natural philosophy, medicine, and religious toleration. There are also five chapters on other individuals and topics, including the physician and author John Moore, James Boswell during his student days, images of Glasgow in popular poetry, and Popular party clergymen who challenged the dominant views of the academic Enlightenment with an alternative vision of liberty and piety.

This edition features a new bibliographical preface by Richard B. Sher that discusses the substantial secondary literature on eighteenth-century Glasgow and the Glasgow Enlightenment since the original publication of this book more than a quarter of a century ago.
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The Glasgow Enlightenment is widely regarded as the first book to explore the nature and accomplishments of the Enlightenment in eighteenth-century Glasgow in a comprehensive manner. In addition to a general introduction by the editors, there are seven chapters devoted to Glasgow University professors, such as Adam Smith, Francis Hutcheson, Thomas Reid, John Millar, William Leechman, and John Anderson. At a time when the Glasgow economy was booming in the strength of its trade with America, these and other Glasgow men of science and learning were making major contributions to the European world of philosophy, law, political economy, natural philosophy, medicine, and religious toleration. There are also five chapters on other individuals and topics, including the physician and author John Moore, James Boswell during his student days, images of Glasgow in popular poetry, and Popular party clergymen who challenged the dominant views of the academic Enlightenment with an alternative vision of liberty and piety.

This edition features a new bibliographical preface by Richard B. Sher that discusses the substantial secondary literature on eighteenth-century Glasgow and the Glasgow Enlightenment since the original publication of this book more than a quarter of a century ago.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Contributors
  • Illustrations
  • Abbreviations
  • Introduction: Glasgow and the Enlightenment
  • I The University and Enlightenment Culture
    • 1. Politics and the Glasgow Professors, 1690–1800
    • 2. Francis Hutcheson and the Civic Humanist Tradition
    • 3. William Leechman, Pulpit Eloquence and the Glasgow Enlightenment
    • 4. Adam Smith’s ‘Happiest’ Years as a Glasgow Professor
    • 5. Thomas Reid in the Glasgow Literary Society
    • 6. Jolly Jack Phosphorous in the Venice of the North; or, Who Was John Anderson?
    • 7. ‘Famous as a school for Law, as Edinburgh … for medicine’: Legal Education in Glasgow, 1761–1801
  • II Beyond the Academic Enlightenment
    • 8. Boswell in Glasgow: Adam Smith, Moral Sentiments and the Sympathy of Biography
    • 9. John Moore, the Medical Profession and the Glasgow Enlightenment
    • 10. Images of Glasgow in Late Eighteenth-Century Popular Poetry
    • 11. Liberty, Piety and Patronage: The Social Context of Contested Clerical Calls in Eighteenth-Century Glasgow
    • 12. Evangelical Civic Humanism in Glasgow: The American War Sermons of William Thom
  • Index
  • Plates
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