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Data of Ethics by Herbert Spencer

Data of Ethics (1883)
by Herbert Spencer

 

Herbert Spencer Limits of the State

Herbert Spencer and the Limits of the State : The Late Nineteenth-Century Debate Between Individualism and Collectivism 
by Michael Taylor (Editor)

Herbert Spencer  1820 - 1903

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Equal Freedom and Utility : Herbert Spencer's Liberal Utilitarianism
Political Writings of Herbert SpencerPolitical Writings (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) by Herbert Spencer, John Offer (Editor).  

Presenting Spencer's classic attempt to expose the flaws in socialism and to assert political individualism as the best way to guarantee social progress, this book will be interest to undergraduates and specialists in politics, political theory, social policy, sociology and history....  

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Herbert Spencer -- Encarta Biography

Spencer, Herbert (1820-1903), British social philosopher, often regarded as one of the first sociologists. He was born in Derby, England. In 1851 Spencer published Social Statics, a work in which he stressed the importance of individual freedom and the inevitability of human progress...

 

Herbert Spencer 
Excerpt:  

In the real world, whether in nature or in society, every man is not free to do that which he wills even provided he infringes not he equal freedom of any other man. That's just the way things are in the real world. Equal freedom is not an aspect nature or even of society as it is in reality , resembling nature with respect to force and deception differing only in that the animals involved are of the human species, but of society as it ought to be in the opinion Herbert Spencer. The Law of Equal Freedom is not a natural law but a moral law.  

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The Man Versus The State
First Principles

 

The Development of Herbert Spencer's Concept of Evolution

Essay by Robert M. Young

Excerpt:

The scientific controversies surrounding the theory of evolution in the nineteenth century were primarily concerned with the interpretation of the geological, paleontological, and biological evidence. The public debate, on the other hand, centered above all on man's place in nature and the implications of evolution for the immortal soul, the mind, and it organ, the brain. It is somewhat surprising to find that the writings of historians and indeed of Darwin himself fail to pay close attention to the effects of the theory of evolution on the study of mind and brain. If we do turn our attention directly to this topic, we find that the major nineteenth century figures are Herbert Spencer, John Hughlings Jackson, and George J. Romanes. In this brief paper I want to confine my attention to the development and influence of Spencer's concept of evolution. Unlike Darwin, Spencer was never much of an observer or indeed a reader, and his independent formulation of a theory of evolution developed from his speculations in social theory and psychology. The idea of evolution itself was not, of course, original. He was converted to a belief in the so-called "development hypothesis" by reading Charles Lyell, whose supposed refutation of Lamarck led Spencer to the opposite conclusion. Spencer also took part in the debates surrounding the anonymous Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (1844) and discussed this book with T. H. Huxley, who later said of the period 1851—1858, "...the only person known to me whose knowledge and capacity compelled respect, and who was, at the same time, a through-going evolutionist, was Mr. Herbert Spencer...

 

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