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  1. John Stuart Mill

    John Stuart Mill

    British philosopher and political economist

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  1. John Stuart Mill was born at 13 Rodney Street in Pentonville, then on the edge of the capital and now in central London, the eldest son of Harriet Barrow and the Scottish philosopher, historian, and economist James Mill. John Stuart was educated by his father, with the advice and assistance of Jeremy Bentham and Francis Place.

  2. Aug 25, 2016 · John Stuart Mill (1806–73) was the most influential English language philosopher of the nineteenth century. He was a naturalist, a utilitarian, and a liberal, whose work explores the consequences of a thoroughgoing empiricist outlook.

  3. Mar 1, 2024 · Though not always recognized as such, J.S. Mill was a theorist of education. Throughout his writings, he offered various proposals for reforming the system of education in his native England in the pursuit of both greater civilizational progress and increasing individual freedom.

    • jkcynamon@uga.edu
  4. John Stuart Mill's account of his education in Autobiography (1873) is typically sifted through three interrelated sets of polarities: nurture/nature; reason/emotion; authority/autonomy. First, the father tried to mold the son's development towards a specific ideal, curbing his spontaneous growth.

  5. John Stuart Mill, a supporter of state provision of popular and secular education at a national scale in Victorian England, believed education was a means to foster human mind development, accounting also for the future progress of mankind.

    • Elisabete Mendes Silva
    • 2021
  6. May 31, 2024 · He was born in London and educated at Oxford. Like Mill, he was a lifelong, active reformer, proposing changes to education and the prison system, his Panopticon where prisoners were watched 24 hours a day. He also supported changes to laws on the treatment of animals.

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  8. In this chapter, I explore John Stuart Mill's philosophy of education and its connection and intersection with democracy, within the context of his distinctive form of utilitarianism and his egalitarian liberalism.

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