fbpx
Wikipedia

Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury

Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury (26 February 1671 – 16 February 1713) was an English peer, Whig politician, philosopher and writer.


The Earl of Shaftesbury
Born(1671-02-26)26 February 1671
London, England
Died16 February 1713(1713-02-16) (aged 41–42)
Chiaia, Naples
Era18th-century philosophy
Early modern philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolCambridge Platonism

Early life edit

He was born at Exeter House in London, the son and first child of the future Anthony Ashley Cooper, 2nd Earl of Shaftesbury and his wife Lady Dorothy Manners, daughter of John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland.

Letters sent to his parents reveal emotional manipulation attempted by his mother in refusing to see her son unless he cut off all ties to his sickly and secluded father. At the age of three Ashley-Cooper was made over to the formal guardianship of his grandfather Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury. John Locke, as medical attendant to the Ashley household, was entrusted with the supervision of his education. It was conducted according to the principles of Locke's Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693), and the method of teaching Latin and Greek conversationally was pursued by his instructress, Elizabeth Birch. At the age of eleven, it is said, Ashley could read both languages with ease.[1] Birch had moved to Clapham and Ashley spent some years there with her.[2]

 
Anthony Ashley Cooper with his brother Maurice, in a 1702 painting by John Closterman designed to illustrate his Neo-Platonist beliefs

In 1683, after the death of the first Earl, his father sent Lord Ashley, as he now was by courtesy, to Winchester College. Under a Scottish tutor, Daniel Denoune, he began a continental tour with two older companions, Sir John Cropley, 2nd Baronet, and Thomas Sclater Bacon.[3]

Under William and Mary edit

After the Glorious Revolution, Lord Ashley returned to England in 1689. It took five years, but he entered public life, as a parliamentary candidate for the borough of Poole, and was returned on 21 May 1695. He spoke for the Bill for Regulating Trials in Cases of Treason, one provision of which was that a person indicted for treason or misprision of treason should be allowed the assistance of counsel.[1]

Although a Whig, Ashley was not partisan. His poor health forced him to retire from parliament at the dissolution of July 1698. He suffered from asthma.[1] The following year, to escape the London environment, he purchased a property in Little Chelsea,[3] adding a 50-foot extension to the existing building to house his bedchamber and Library, and planting fruit trees and vines. He sold the property to Narcissus Luttrell in 1710.[4]

He was Lord Proprietor of the English colony of Carolina in North America and the Bahamas during this time.

Lord Ashley moved to the Netherlands. Away for over a year, Ashley returned to England, and shortly succeeded his father as Earl of Shaftesbury. He took an active part, on the Whig side in the House of Lords, in the general election of 1700–1701, and again, with more success, in the autumn election of 1701.[3]

Under Queen Anne edit

After the first few weeks of Anne's reign, Shaftesbury, who had been deprived of the vice-admiralty of Dorset, returned to private life.[1] In August 1703, he again settled in the Netherlands. At Rotterdam he lived, he says in a letter to his steward Wheelock, at the rate of less than £200 a year, and yet had much to dispose of and spend beyond convenient living.[5]

Shaftesbury returned to England in August 1704, he landed at Aldeburgh, Suffolk having escaped a dangerous storm during his voyage.[6] He had symptoms of consumption, and gradually became an invalid. He continued to take an interest in politics, both home and foreign, and supported England's participation in the War of the Spanish Succession.[5]

The declining state of Shaftesbury's health rendered it necessary for him to seek a warmer climate and in July 1711 he set out for Italy. He settled at Naples in November, and lived there for more than a year.[7]

Death edit

Shaftesbury died at Chiaia in the Kingdom of Naples, on 15 February 1713 (N.S.) His body was brought back to England and buried at Wimborne St Giles, the family seat in Dorset.[3]

Associations edit

John Toland was an early associate, but Shaftesbury after some time found him a troublesome ally. Toland published a draft of the Inquiry concerning Virtue, without permission. Shaftesbury may have exaggerated its faults, but the relationship cooled.[3] Toland edited 14 letters from Shaftesbury to Robert Molesworth, published in Toland in 1721.[7] Molesworth had been a good friend from the 1690s. Other friends among English Whigs were Charles Davenant, Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, Walter Moyle, William Stephens and John Trenchard.[3]

From Locke's circle in England, Shaftesbury knew Edward Clarke, Damaris Masham and Walter Yonge. In the Netherlands in the late 1690s, he got to know Locke's contact Benjamin Furly. Through Furly he had introductions to become acquainted with Pierre Bayle, Jean Leclerc and Philipp van Limborch. Bayle introduced him to Pierre Des Maizeaux.[3] Letters from Shaftesbury to Benjamin Furly, his two sons, and his clerk Harry Wilkinson, were included in a volume entitled Original Letters of Locke, Sidney and Shaftesbury, published by Thomas Ignatius Maria Forster (1830, and in enlarged form, 1847).

Shaftesbury was a patron of Michael Ainsworth, a young Dorset man of Wimborne St Giles, maintained by Shaftesbury at University College, Oxford. The Letters to a Young Man at the University (1716) were addressed to Ainsworth. Others he supported included Pierre Coste and Paul Crellius.[3]

Works edit

Most of the works for which Shaftesbury is known were completed in the period 1705 to 1710. He collected a number of those and other works in Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times (first edition 1711, anonymous, 3 vols.).[8][9] His philosophical work was limited to ethics, religion, and aesthetics where he highlighted the concept of the sublime as an aesthetic quality.[7] Basil Willey wrote "[...] his writings, though suave and polished, lack distinction of style [...]".[10]

Contents of the Characteristicks edit

This listing refers to the first edition.[11] The later editions saw changes. The Letter on Design was first published in the edition of the Characteristicks issued in 1732.[7]

Volume I

The opening piece is A Letter Concerning Enthusiasm, advocating religious toleration, published anonymously in 1708. It was based on a letter sent to John Somers, 1st Baron Somers of September 1707.[12] At this time repression of the French Camisards was topical.[7] The second treatise is Sensus Communis: An Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour, first published in 1709.[8][13] The third part is Soliloquy: or, Advice to an Author, from 1710.[14]

Volume II

It opens with Inquiry Concerning Virtue and Merit, based on a work from 1699. With this treatise, Shaftesbury became the founder of moral sense theory.[8][15] It is accompanied by The Moralists, a Philosophical Rhapsody, from 1709.[8] Shaftesbury himself regarded it as the most ambitious of his treatises.[16] The main object of The Moralists is to propound a system of natural theology, for theodicy. Shaftesbury believed in one God whose characteristic attribute is universal benevolence; in the moral government of the universe; and in a future state of man making up for the present life.[7]

Volume III

Entitled Miscellaneous Reflections, this consisted of previously unpublished works.[8] From his stay at Naples there was A Notion of the Historical Draught or Tablature of the Judgment of Hercules.[7]

Philosophical moralist edit

 
Engraving of Anthony Ashley Cooper in the first volume of Characteristicks from 1732

Shaftesbury as a moralist opposed Thomas Hobbes. He was a follower of the Cambridge Platonists, and like them rejected the way Hobbes collapsed moral issues into expediency.[17] His first published work was an anonymous Preface to the sermons of Benjamin Whichcote, a prominent Cambridge Platonist, published in 1698. In it he belaboured Hobbes and his ethical egoism, but also the commonplace carrot and stick arguments of Christian moralists.[3] While Shaftesbury conformed in public to the Church of England, his private view of some of its doctrines was less respectful.[7]

His starting point in the Characteristicks, however, was indeed such a form of ethical naturalism as was common ground for Hobbes, Bernard Mandeville and Spinoza: appeal to self-interest. He divided moralists into Stoics and Epicurean, identifying with the Stoics and their attention to the common good. It made him concentrate on virtue. He took Spinoza and Descartes as the leading Epicureans of his time (in unpublished writings).[18]

Shaftesbury examined man first as a unit in himself, and secondly socially. His major principle was harmony or balance, rather than rationalism. In man, he wrote,

"Whoever is in the least versed in this moral kind of architecture will find the inward fabric so adjusted, [...] that the barely extending of a single passion too far or the continuance [...] of it too long, is able to bring irrecoverable ruin and misery".[19]

This version of a golden mean doctrine that goes back to Aristotle was savaged by Mandeville, who slurred it as associated with a sheltered and comfortable life, Catholic asceticism, and modern sentimental rusticity.[20] On the other hand, Jonathan Edwards adopted Shaftesbury's view that "all excellency is harmony, symmetry or proportion".[21]

On man as a social creature, Shaftesbury argued that the egoist and the extreme altruist are both imperfect. People, to contribute to the happiness of the whole, must fit in.[22] He rejected the idea that humankind is naturally selfish; and the idea that altruism necessarily cuts across self-interest.[23] Thomas Jefferson found this general and social approach attractive.[24]

This move relied on a close parallel between moral and aesthetic criteria. In the English tradition, this appeal to a moral sense was innovative. Primarily emotional and non-reflective, it becomes rationalised by education and use. Corollaries are that morality stands apart from theology, and the moral qualities of actions are determined apart from the will of God; and that the moralist is not concerned to solve the problems of free will and determinism. Shaftesbury in this way opposed also what is to be found in Locke.[22]

Reception edit

The conceptual framework used by Shaftesbury was representative of much thinking in the early Enlightenment, and remained popular until the 1770s.[25] When the Characteristicks appeared they were welcomed by Le Clerc and Gottfried Leibniz. Among the English deists Shaftesbury was significant, plausible and the most respectable. [22]

By the Augustans edit

In terms of Augustan literature, Shaftesbury's defence of ridicule was taken as an entitlement to scoff, and to use ridicule as a "test of truth". Clerical authors operated on the assumption that he was a freethinker.[26] Ezra Stiles, reading Characteristicks in 1748 without realising Shaftesbury had been marked down as a deist, was both impressed and sometimes shocked. Around this time John Leland and Philip Skelton stepped up a campaign against deist influence, tarnishing Shaftesbury's reputation.[27]

While Shaftesbury wrote on ridicule in the 1712 edition of Characteristicks, the modern scholarly consensus is that the uses of his views on it as a "test of truth" were a stretch.[28] According to Alfred Owen Aldridge, the "test of truth" phrase is not to be found in Characteristicks; it was imposed on the Augustan debate by George Berkeley.[29]

The influence of Shaftesbury, and in particular The Moralists, on An Essay on Man, was claimed in the 18th century by Voltaire (in his philosophical letter "On Pope"),[30] Lord Hervey and Thomas Warton, and supported in recent times, for example by Maynard Mack. Alexander Pope did not mention Shaftesbury explicitly as a source: this omission has been understood in terms of the political divide, Pope being a Tory.[31] Pope references the character Theocles from The Moralists in the Dunciad (IV.487–490):

"Or that bright Image to our Fancy draw,
Which Theocles in raptur'd vision saw,
While thro' Poetic scenes the Genius roves,
Or wanders wild in Academic Groves".

In notes to these lines, Pope directed the reader to various passages in Shaftesbury's work.[22]

In moral philosophy and its literary reflection edit

Shaftesbury's ethical system was rationalised by Francis Hutcheson, and from him passed with modifications to David Hume; these writers, however, changed from reliance on moral sense to the deontological ethics of moral obligation.[32] From there it was taken up by Adam Smith, who elaborated a theory of moral judgement with some restricted emotional input, and a complex apparatus taking context into account.[33] Joseph Butler adopted the system, but not ruling out the place of "moral reason", a rationalist version of the affective moral sense.[34] Samuel Johnson, the American educator, did not accept Shaftesbury's moral sense as a given, but believed it might be available by intermittent divine intervention.[35]

In the English sentimental novel of the 18th century, arguments from the Shaftesbury–Hutcheson tradition appear. An early example in Mary Collyer's Felicia to Charlotte (vol.1, 1744) comes from its hero Lucius, who reasons in line with An Enquiry Concerning Virtue and Merit on the "moral sense".[36] The second volume (1749) has discussions of conduct book material, and makes use of the Philemon to Hydaspes (1737) of Henry Coventry, described by Aldridge as "filled with favorable references to Shaftesbury."[37][38] The eponymous hero of The History of Sir Charles Grandison (1753) by Samuel Richardson has been described as embodying the "Shaftesburian model" of masculinity: he is "stoic, rational, in control, yet sympathetic towards others, particularly those less fortunate."[39] A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy (1768) by Laurence Sterne was intended by its author to evoke the "sympathizing principle" on which the tradition founded by latitudinarians, Cambridge Platonists and Shaftesbury relied.[40]

Across Europe edit

In 1745 Denis Diderot adapted or reproduced the Inquiry concerning Virtue in what was afterwards known as his Essai sur le Mérite et la Vertu. In 1769 a French translation of the whole of Shaftesbury's works, including the Letters, was published at Geneva.[22]

Translations of separate treatises into German began to be made in 1738, and in 1776–1779 there appeared a complete German translation of the Characteristicks. Hermann Theodor Hettner stated that not only Leibniz, Voltaire and Diderot, but Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Moses Mendelssohn, Christoph Martin Wieland and Johann Gottfried von Herder, drew from Shaftesbury.[22]

Herder in early work took from Shaftesbury arguments for respecting individuality, and against system and universal psychology. He went on to praise him in Adrastea.[41] Wilhelm von Humboldt found in Shaftesbury the "inward form" concept, key for education in the approach of German classical philosophy.[42] Later philosophical writers in German (Gideon Spicker with Die Philosophie des Grafen von Shaftesbury, 1872, and Georg von Gizycki with Die Philosophie Shaftesbury's, 1876) returned to Shaftesbury in books.[43]

Legacy edit

 
Philosopher's Tower on the Shaftesbury Estate

At the beginning of the 18th century, Shaftesbury built a folly on the Shaftesbury Estate, known as the Philosopher's Tower. It sits in a field, visible from the B3078 just south of Cranborne.

In the Shaftesbury papers that went to the Public Record Office are several memoranda, letters, rough drafts, etc.[7]

A portrait of the 3rd Earl is displayed in Shaftesbury Town Hall.[44]

Family edit

Shaftesbury married in 1709 Jane Ewer, the daughter of Thomas Ewer of Bushey Hall, Hertfordshire. On 9 February 1711, their only child Anthony, the future fourth Earl was born.[3]

His son succeeded him in his titles and republished Characteristicks in 1732. His great-grandson was the famous philanthropist, Anthony Ashley Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury.[7]

Publications of Shaftesbury edit

The following list of Shaftebury's principal publications has been sourced from The third Earl of Shaftesbury, 1671–1713 by Robert Voitle.[45]

  • The Danger of Mercenary Parliaments. 1698. With the collaboration of John Toland.
  • Select Sermons of Dr. Whichcot[e]. London, 1698. Preface by Shaftesbury.
  • An Inquiry Concerning Virtue, in Two Discourses. London, 1699.
  • The Adept Ladys or The Angelick Sect. Being the Matters of fact of certain Adventures Spiritual, Philosophical, Political, and Gallant. In a Letter to a Brother. 1702.
  • Paradoxes of State, Relating to the Present Juncture of Affairs in England and the rest of Europe; Chiefly grounded on his Majesty's Princely, Pious, and most Gracious Speech. London, 1702. With the collaboration of John Toland.
  • The Sociable Enthusiast. A Philosophical Adventure Written to Palemon. [1704?]
  • A Letter Concerning Enthusiasm, To My Lord *****. London, 1708.
  • The Moralists, a Philosophical Rhapsody. Being a recital of certain conversations upon natural and moral subjects. London, 1709.
  • Sensus Communis: An Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour. In a letter to a friend. London, 1709.
  • Soliloquy: or, Advice to an Author. London, 1710.
  • AΣKHMATA [”Exercises”). Written from 1698 to 1712. Edited by Benjamin Rand in 1900 in The Life, Unpublished Letters, and Philosophical Regimen of Anthony, Earl of Shaftesbury.
  • Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times. 3 vols. London, 1711. [Second corrected edition, 1714.]
  • Second Characters, or the Language of Forms. Largely written in 1712.
  • A Letter Concerning the Art or Science of Design, written from Italy (on the occasion of Some Designs in Painting), to my Lord *****. [This appears in some copies of the 1714 edition of Characteristicks, and regularly from the 1732 edition on.]
  • A Notion of the Historical Draught or Tablature of the Judgment of Hercules. 1713. [First printed in French in the November 1712 edition of the Journal des sçavans as "Raisonnement sur le tableau du jugement d'Hercule, selon l'histoire de Prodicus." It is in some copies of the 1714 edition of Characteristicks and most later ones.]
  • Plasticks, or the Original Progress and Power of Designatory Art.
  • Several Letters Written by a Noble Lord to a Young Man at the University. London, 1716.
  • Letters from the Right Honourable the late Earl of Shaftesbury, to Robert Molesworth, Esq. . . . with two letters written by the late Sir John Cropley. Ed. with an introduction by John Toland. London, 1721.
  • Letters of the Earl of Shaftesbury. Collected into one volume, London, 1750.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Fowler & Mitchell 1911, p. 763.
  2. ^ "About". The Clapham Historian. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Klein, Lawrence E. "Cooper, Anthony Ashley, third Earl of Shaftesbury (1671–1713)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/6209. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ The Environs of London: Being an Historical Account of the Towns, Villages, and Hamlets, Within Twelve Miles of that Capital : Interspersed with Biographical Anecdotes. T. Cadell and W. Davies. 1811. pp. 110–111.
  5. ^ a b Fowler & Mitchell 1911, pp. 763, 764.
  6. ^ "Electronic Enlightenment: John Freke to John Locke". www.e-enlightenment.com. 2019. doi:10.13051/ee:doc/lockjoou0080384b1c. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fowler & Mitchell 1911, p. 764.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Lord Shaftesbury [Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury"] entry by Michael B. Gill in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 9 September 2016
  9. ^ Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper of (1711). Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times. s.n.
  10. ^ Willey, Basil (1964). The English Moralists. Chatto & Windus. p. 227.
  11. ^ Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper of (1711). Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times. s.n.
  12. ^ Richard B. Wolf, The Publication of Shaftesbury's "Letter concerning Enthusiasm", Studies in Bibliography Vol. 32 (1979), pp. 236–241, at pp. 236–237. Published by: Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia JSTOR 40371706
  13. ^ Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper of (1711). Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times. s.n. p. 57.
  14. ^ Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper of (1711). Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times. s.n. p. 151.
  15. ^ "Anthony Ashley Cooper, Third Earl of Shaftesbury, on the Emotions" entry by Amy M. Schmitter in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2010
  16. ^ John G. Hayman, The Evolution of "The Moralists", The Modern Language Review Vol. 64, No. 4 (Oct., 1969), pp. 728–733, at p. 728. Published by: Modern Humanities Research Association JSTOR 3723913
  17. ^ Brett, R. L. (2020). The Third Earl of Shaftesbury: A Study in Eighteenth-Century Literary Theory. Routledge. p. 290. ISBN 978-1-000-03127-0.
  18. ^ Israel, Jonathan I. (2002). Radical Enlightenment: Philosophy and the Making of Modernity 1650–1750. OUP Oxford. pp. 625–626. ISBN 9780191622878.
  19. ^ Fowler & Mitchell 1911, p. 765 Cites: Inquiry concerning Virtue or Merit, Bk. II. ii. 1.
  20. ^ Sambrook, James (2014). The Eighteenth Century: The Intellectual and Cultural Context of English Literature 1700–1789. Routledge. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-317-89324-0.
  21. ^ Bombaro, John J. (2011). Jonathan Edwards's Vision of Reality: The Relationship of God to the World, Redemption History, and the Reprobate. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-63087-812-2.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Fowler & Mitchell 1911, p. 765.
  23. ^ Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of (1977). An Inquiry Concerning Virtue, Or Merit. Manchester University Press. p. xv. ISBN 978-0-7190-0657-9.
  24. ^ Vicchio, Stephen J. (2007). Jefferson's Religion. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-59752-830-6.
  25. ^ Chisick, Harvey (2005). Historical Dictionary of the Enlightenment. Scarecrow Press. p. 385. ISBN 978-0-8108-6548-8.
  26. ^ Bullard, Paddy (2019). The Oxford Handbook of Eighteenth-Century Satire. Oxford University Press. p. 578. ISBN 978-0-19-872783-5.
  27. ^ Fiering, Norman (2006). Jonathan Edwards's Moral Thought and Its British Context. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 109 note8. ISBN 978-1-59752-618-0.
  28. ^ Amir, Lydia B. (2014). Humor and the Good Life in Modern Philosophy: Shaftesbury, Hamann, Kierkegaard. SUNY Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4384-4938-8.
  29. ^ Alfred Owen Aldridge, Shaftesbury and the Test of Truth, PMLA Vol. 60, No. 1 (Mar., 1945), pp. 129–156, at p. 129. Published by: Modern Language Association JSTOR 459126
  30. ^ "On Pope"
  31. ^ William E. Alderman, Pope's "Essay on Man" and Shaftesbury's "The Moralists", The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America Vol. 67, No. 2 (Second Quarter, 1973), pp. 131–140. Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Bibliographical Society of America JSTOR 24301749
  32. ^ Darwall, Stephen; Stephen, Darwall (1995). The British Moralists and the Internal 'Ought': 1640–1740. Cambridge University Press. p. 219 and note 25. ISBN 978-0-521-45782-8.
  33. ^ Haakonssen, Knud (1996). Natural Law and Moral Philosophy: From Grotius to the Scottish Enlightenment. Cambridge University Press. pp. 231–232. ISBN 978-0-521-49802-9.
  34. ^ Skorupski, John (2010). The Routledge Companion to Ethics. Routledge. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-136-96422-0.
  35. ^ Joseph J. Ellis III, The Philosophy of Samuel Johnson, The William and Mary Quarterly Vol. 28, No. 1 (Jan., 1971), pp. 26–45, at p. 44. Published by: Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture JSTOR 1925118
  36. ^ Staves, Susan (2006). A Literary History of Women's Writing in Britain, 1660–1789. Cambridge University Press. pp. 237–238. ISBN 978-1-139-45858-0.
  37. ^ Staves, Susan (2006). A Literary History of Women's Writing in Britain, 1660–1789. Cambridge University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-139-45858-0.
  38. ^ Alfred Owen Aldridge, Shaftesbury and the Deist Manifesto, Transactions of the American Philosophical Society Vol. 41, No. 2 (1951), pp. 297–382, at p. 376. Published by: American Philosophical Society. JSTOR 1005651
  39. ^ Sabor, Peter; Schellenberg, Betty A. (2017). Samuel Richardson in Context. Cambridge University Press. p. 252. ISBN 978-1-108-32716-9.
  40. ^ Ross, Ian Campbell (2001). Laurence Sterne: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 418. ISBN 978-0-19-212235-3.
  41. ^ Gjesdal, Kristin (2017). Herder's Hermeneutics: History, Poetry, Enlightenment. Cambridge University Press. p. 112 and note 27. ISBN 978-1-107-11286-5.
  42. ^ Palmer, Joy; Bresler, Liora; Cooper, David (2002). Fifty Major Thinkers on Education: From Confucius to Dewey. Routledge. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-134-73594-5.
  43. ^ Erdmann, Johann Eduard (2004). A History of Philosophy. Psychology Press. p. 123. ISBN 978-0-415-29542-0.
  44. ^ "Anthony Ashley-Cooper (1671–1713), 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury". Art UK. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  45. ^ Voitle, Robert (1984). The third Earl of Shaftesbury, 1671–1713. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 417–418. ISBN 0807111392.
Attribution

Further reading edit

  • Cooper, Anthony Ashley, Earl of Shaftesbury, An Inquiry Concerning Virtue, London, 1699. Facsimile ed., introd. Joseph Filonowicz, 1991, Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, ISBN 978-0-8201-1455-2.
  • David Walford (editor). An Inquiry Concerning Virtue or Merit. A selection of material from Toland's 1699 edition with introduction.
  • Robert B. Voitle, The third Earl of Shaftesbury, 1671–1713, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, c. 1984.
  • Edward Chaney (2000), George Berkeley's Grand Tours: The Immaterialist as Connoisseur of Art and Architecture, in E. Chaney, The Evolution of the Grand Tour: Anglo-Italian Cultural Relations since the Renaissance, 2nd ed. London, Routledge
  • Watson, Paula; Lancaster, Henry. "ASHLEY, Anthony, Lord Ashley (1671–1713), of Wimborne St. Giles, Dorset". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  • Smith, George H. (2008). "Shaftesbury, Third Earl of (1671–1713)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. p. 462. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n282. ISBN 978-1412965804. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.

External links edit

  •   Works by or about Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury at Wikisource
  •   Quotations related to Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury at Wikiquote
  • Shaftesbury's Characteristicks in three parts
  • Contains the five treatises in Shaftesbury's Characteristicks, slightly modified for easier reading
  • The Third Earl of Shaftesbury, an article by John McAteer in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2011

anthony, ashley, cooper, earl, shaftesbury, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, january, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, german, article, machin. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German January 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 052 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Anthony Ashley Cooper 3 Earl of Shaftesbury see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Anthony Ashley Cooper 3 Earl of Shaftesbury to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury 26 February 1671 16 February 1713 was an English peer Whig politician philosopher and writer The Right HonourableThe Earl of ShaftesburyBorn 1671 02 26 26 February 1671London EnglandDied16 February 1713 1713 02 16 aged 41 42 Chiaia NaplesEra18th century philosophyEarly modern philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolCambridge Platonism Contents 1 Early life 2 Under William and Mary 3 Under Queen Anne 4 Death 5 Associations 6 Works 6 1 Contents of the Characteristicks 6 2 Philosophical moralist 6 3 Reception 6 3 1 By the Augustans 6 3 2 In moral philosophy and its literary reflection 6 3 3 Across Europe 7 Legacy 8 Family 9 Publications of Shaftesbury 10 Notes 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editHe was born at Exeter House in London the son and first child of the future Anthony Ashley Cooper 2nd Earl of Shaftesbury and his wife Lady Dorothy Manners daughter of John Manners 8th Earl of Rutland Letters sent to his parents reveal emotional manipulation attempted by his mother in refusing to see her son unless he cut off all ties to his sickly and secluded father At the age of three Ashley Cooper was made over to the formal guardianship of his grandfather Anthony Ashley Cooper 1st Earl of Shaftesbury John Locke as medical attendant to the Ashley household was entrusted with the supervision of his education It was conducted according to the principles of Locke s Some Thoughts Concerning Education 1693 and the method of teaching Latin and Greek conversationally was pursued by his instructress Elizabeth Birch At the age of eleven it is said Ashley could read both languages with ease 1 Birch had moved to Clapham and Ashley spent some years there with her 2 nbsp Anthony Ashley Cooper with his brother Maurice in a 1702 painting by John Closterman designed to illustrate his Neo Platonist beliefsIn 1683 after the death of the first Earl his father sent Lord Ashley as he now was by courtesy to Winchester College Under a Scottish tutor Daniel Denoune he began a continental tour with two older companions Sir John Cropley 2nd Baronet and Thomas Sclater Bacon 3 Under William and Mary editAfter the Glorious Revolution Lord Ashley returned to England in 1689 It took five years but he entered public life as a parliamentary candidate for the borough of Poole and was returned on 21 May 1695 He spoke for the Bill for Regulating Trials in Cases of Treason one provision of which was that a person indicted for treason or misprision of treason should be allowed the assistance of counsel 1 Although a Whig Ashley was not partisan His poor health forced him to retire from parliament at the dissolution of July 1698 He suffered from asthma 1 The following year to escape the London environment he purchased a property in Little Chelsea 3 adding a 50 foot extension to the existing building to house his bedchamber and Library and planting fruit trees and vines He sold the property to Narcissus Luttrell in 1710 4 He was Lord Proprietor of the English colony of Carolina in North America and the Bahamas during this time Lord Ashley moved to the Netherlands Away for over a year Ashley returned to England and shortly succeeded his father as Earl of Shaftesbury He took an active part on the Whig side in the House of Lords in the general election of 1700 1701 and again with more success in the autumn election of 1701 3 Under Queen Anne editAfter the first few weeks of Anne s reign Shaftesbury who had been deprived of the vice admiralty of Dorset returned to private life 1 In August 1703 he again settled in the Netherlands At Rotterdam he lived he says in a letter to his steward Wheelock at the rate of less than 200 a year and yet had much to dispose of and spend beyond convenient living 5 Shaftesbury returned to England in August 1704 he landed at Aldeburgh Suffolk having escaped a dangerous storm during his voyage 6 He had symptoms of consumption and gradually became an invalid He continued to take an interest in politics both home and foreign and supported England s participation in the War of the Spanish Succession 5 The declining state of Shaftesbury s health rendered it necessary for him to seek a warmer climate and in July 1711 he set out for Italy He settled at Naples in November and lived there for more than a year 7 Death editShaftesbury died at Chiaia in the Kingdom of Naples on 15 February 1713 N S His body was brought back to England and buried at Wimborne St Giles the family seat in Dorset 3 Associations editJohn Toland was an early associate but Shaftesbury after some time found him a troublesome ally Toland published a draft of the Inquiry concerning Virtue without permission Shaftesbury may have exaggerated its faults but the relationship cooled 3 Toland edited 14 letters from Shaftesbury to Robert Molesworth published in Toland in 1721 7 Molesworth had been a good friend from the 1690s Other friends among English Whigs were Charles Davenant Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun Walter Moyle William Stephens and John Trenchard 3 From Locke s circle in England Shaftesbury knew Edward Clarke Damaris Masham and Walter Yonge In the Netherlands in the late 1690s he got to know Locke s contact Benjamin Furly Through Furly he had introductions to become acquainted with Pierre Bayle Jean Leclerc and Philipp van Limborch Bayle introduced him to Pierre Des Maizeaux 3 Letters from Shaftesbury to Benjamin Furly his two sons and his clerk Harry Wilkinson were included in a volume entitled Original Letters of Locke Sidney and Shaftesbury published by Thomas Ignatius Maria Forster 1830 and in enlarged form 1847 Shaftesbury was a patron of Michael Ainsworth a young Dorset man of Wimborne St Giles maintained by Shaftesbury at University College Oxford The Letters to a Young Man at the University 1716 were addressed to Ainsworth Others he supported included Pierre Coste and Paul Crellius 3 Works editMost of the works for which Shaftesbury is known were completed in the period 1705 to 1710 He collected a number of those and other works in Characteristicks of Men Manners Opinions Times first edition 1711 anonymous 3 vols 8 9 His philosophical work was limited to ethics religion and aesthetics where he highlighted the concept of the sublime as an aesthetic quality 7 Basil Willey wrote his writings though suave and polished lack distinction of style 10 Contents of the Characteristicks edit This listing refers to the first edition 11 The later editions saw changes The Letter on Design was first published in the edition of the Characteristicks issued in 1732 7 Volume IThe opening piece is A Letter Concerning Enthusiasm advocating religious toleration published anonymously in 1708 It was based on a letter sent to John Somers 1st Baron Somers of September 1707 12 At this time repression of the French Camisards was topical 7 The second treatise is Sensus Communis An Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour first published in 1709 8 13 The third part is Soliloquy or Advice to an Author from 1710 14 Volume IIIt opens with Inquiry Concerning Virtue and Merit based on a work from 1699 With this treatise Shaftesbury became the founder of moral sense theory 8 15 It is accompanied by The Moralists a Philosophical Rhapsody from 1709 8 Shaftesbury himself regarded it as the most ambitious of his treatises 16 The main object of The Moralists is to propound a system of natural theology for theodicy Shaftesbury believed in one God whose characteristic attribute is universal benevolence in the moral government of the universe and in a future state of man making up for the present life 7 Volume IIIEntitled Miscellaneous Reflections this consisted of previously unpublished works 8 From his stay at Naples there was A Notion of the Historical Draught or Tablature of the Judgment of Hercules 7 Philosophical moralist edit nbsp Engraving of Anthony Ashley Cooper in the first volume of Characteristicks from 1732Shaftesbury as a moralist opposed Thomas Hobbes He was a follower of the Cambridge Platonists and like them rejected the way Hobbes collapsed moral issues into expediency 17 His first published work was an anonymous Preface to the sermons of Benjamin Whichcote a prominent Cambridge Platonist published in 1698 In it he belaboured Hobbes and his ethical egoism but also the commonplace carrot and stick arguments of Christian moralists 3 While Shaftesbury conformed in public to the Church of England his private view of some of its doctrines was less respectful 7 His starting point in the Characteristicks however was indeed such a form of ethical naturalism as was common ground for Hobbes Bernard Mandeville and Spinoza appeal to self interest He divided moralists into Stoics and Epicurean identifying with the Stoics and their attention to the common good It made him concentrate on virtue He took Spinoza and Descartes as the leading Epicureans of his time in unpublished writings 18 Shaftesbury examined man first as a unit in himself and secondly socially His major principle was harmony or balance rather than rationalism In man he wrote Whoever is in the least versed in this moral kind of architecture will find the inward fabric so adjusted that the barely extending of a single passion too far or the continuance of it too long is able to bring irrecoverable ruin and misery 19 This version of a golden mean doctrine that goes back to Aristotle was savaged by Mandeville who slurred it as associated with a sheltered and comfortable life Catholic asceticism and modern sentimental rusticity 20 On the other hand Jonathan Edwards adopted Shaftesbury s view that all excellency is harmony symmetry or proportion 21 On man as a social creature Shaftesbury argued that the egoist and the extreme altruist are both imperfect People to contribute to the happiness of the whole must fit in 22 He rejected the idea that humankind is naturally selfish and the idea that altruism necessarily cuts across self interest 23 Thomas Jefferson found this general and social approach attractive 24 This move relied on a close parallel between moral and aesthetic criteria In the English tradition this appeal to a moral sense was innovative Primarily emotional and non reflective it becomes rationalised by education and use Corollaries are that morality stands apart from theology and the moral qualities of actions are determined apart from the will of God and that the moralist is not concerned to solve the problems of free will and determinism Shaftesbury in this way opposed also what is to be found in Locke 22 Reception edit The conceptual framework used by Shaftesbury was representative of much thinking in the early Enlightenment and remained popular until the 1770s 25 When the Characteristicks appeared they were welcomed by Le Clerc and Gottfried Leibniz Among the English deists Shaftesbury was significant plausible and the most respectable 22 By the Augustans edit In terms of Augustan literature Shaftesbury s defence of ridicule was taken as an entitlement to scoff and to use ridicule as a test of truth Clerical authors operated on the assumption that he was a freethinker 26 Ezra Stiles reading Characteristicks in 1748 without realising Shaftesbury had been marked down as a deist was both impressed and sometimes shocked Around this time John Leland and Philip Skelton stepped up a campaign against deist influence tarnishing Shaftesbury s reputation 27 While Shaftesbury wrote on ridicule in the 1712 edition of Characteristicks the modern scholarly consensus is that the uses of his views on it as a test of truth were a stretch 28 According to Alfred Owen Aldridge the test of truth phrase is not to be found in Characteristicks it was imposed on the Augustan debate by George Berkeley 29 The influence of Shaftesbury and in particular The Moralists on An Essay on Man was claimed in the 18th century by Voltaire in his philosophical letter On Pope 30 Lord Hervey and Thomas Warton and supported in recent times for example by Maynard Mack Alexander Pope did not mention Shaftesbury explicitly as a source this omission has been understood in terms of the political divide Pope being a Tory 31 Pope references the character Theocles from The Moralists in the Dunciad IV 487 490 Or that bright Image to our Fancy draw Which Theocles in raptur d vision saw While thro Poetic scenes the Genius roves Or wanders wild in Academic Groves In notes to these lines Pope directed the reader to various passages in Shaftesbury s work 22 In moral philosophy and its literary reflection edit Shaftesbury s ethical system was rationalised by Francis Hutcheson and from him passed with modifications to David Hume these writers however changed from reliance on moral sense to the deontological ethics of moral obligation 32 From there it was taken up by Adam Smith who elaborated a theory of moral judgement with some restricted emotional input and a complex apparatus taking context into account 33 Joseph Butler adopted the system but not ruling out the place of moral reason a rationalist version of the affective moral sense 34 Samuel Johnson the American educator did not accept Shaftesbury s moral sense as a given but believed it might be available by intermittent divine intervention 35 In the English sentimental novel of the 18th century arguments from the Shaftesbury Hutcheson tradition appear An early example in Mary Collyer s Felicia to Charlotte vol 1 1744 comes from its hero Lucius who reasons in line with An Enquiry Concerning Virtue and Merit on the moral sense 36 The second volume 1749 has discussions of conduct book material and makes use of the Philemon to Hydaspes 1737 of Henry Coventry described by Aldridge as filled with favorable references to Shaftesbury 37 38 The eponymous hero of The History of Sir Charles Grandison 1753 by Samuel Richardson has been described as embodying the Shaftesburian model of masculinity he is stoic rational in control yet sympathetic towards others particularly those less fortunate 39 A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy 1768 by Laurence Sterne was intended by its author to evoke the sympathizing principle on which the tradition founded by latitudinarians Cambridge Platonists and Shaftesbury relied 40 Across Europe edit In 1745 Denis Diderot adapted or reproduced the Inquiry concerning Virtue in what was afterwards known as his Essai sur le Merite et la Vertu In 1769 a French translation of the whole of Shaftesbury s works including the Letters was published at Geneva 22 Translations of separate treatises into German began to be made in 1738 and in 1776 1779 there appeared a complete German translation of the Characteristicks Hermann Theodor Hettner stated that not only Leibniz Voltaire and Diderot but Gotthold Ephraim Lessing Moses Mendelssohn Christoph Martin Wieland and Johann Gottfried von Herder drew from Shaftesbury 22 Herder in early work took from Shaftesbury arguments for respecting individuality and against system and universal psychology He went on to praise him in Adrastea 41 Wilhelm von Humboldt found in Shaftesbury the inward form concept key for education in the approach of German classical philosophy 42 Later philosophical writers in German Gideon Spicker with Die Philosophie des Grafen von Shaftesbury 1872 and Georg von Gizycki with Die Philosophie Shaftesbury s 1876 returned to Shaftesbury in books 43 Legacy edit nbsp Philosopher s Tower on the Shaftesbury EstateAt the beginning of the 18th century Shaftesbury built a folly on the Shaftesbury Estate known as the Philosopher s Tower It sits in a field visible from the B3078 just south of Cranborne In the Shaftesbury papers that went to the Public Record Office are several memoranda letters rough drafts etc 7 A portrait of the 3rd Earl is displayed in Shaftesbury Town Hall 44 Family editShaftesbury married in 1709 Jane Ewer the daughter of Thomas Ewer of Bushey Hall Hertfordshire On 9 February 1711 their only child Anthony the future fourth Earl was born 3 His son succeeded him in his titles and republished Characteristicks in 1732 His great grandson was the famous philanthropist Anthony Ashley Cooper 7th Earl of Shaftesbury 7 Publications of Shaftesbury editThe following list of Shaftebury s principal publications has been sourced from The third Earl of Shaftesbury 1671 1713 by Robert Voitle 45 The Danger of Mercenary Parliaments 1698 With the collaboration of John Toland Select Sermons of Dr Whichcot e London 1698 Preface by Shaftesbury An Inquiry Concerning Virtue in Two Discourses London 1699 The Adept Ladys or The Angelick Sect Being the Matters of fact of certain Adventures Spiritual Philosophical Political and Gallant In a Letter to a Brother 1702 Paradoxes of State Relating to the Present Juncture of Affairs in England and the rest of Europe Chiefly grounded on his Majesty s Princely Pious and most Gracious Speech London 1702 With the collaboration of John Toland The Sociable Enthusiast A Philosophical Adventure Written to Palemon 1704 A Letter Concerning Enthusiasm To My Lord London 1708 The Moralists a Philosophical Rhapsody Being a recital of certain conversations upon natural and moral subjects London 1709 Sensus Communis An Essay on the Freedom of Wit and Humour In a letter to a friend London 1709 Soliloquy or Advice to an Author London 1710 ASKHMATA Exercises Written from 1698 to 1712 Edited by Benjamin Rand in 1900 in The Life Unpublished Letters and Philosophical Regimen of Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury Characteristicks of Men Manners Opinions Times 3 vols London 1711 Second corrected edition 1714 Second Characters or the Language of Forms Largely written in 1712 A Letter Concerning the Art or Science of Design written from Italy on the occasion of Some Designs in Painting to my Lord This appears in some copies of the 1714 edition of Characteristicks and regularly from the 1732 edition on A Notion of the Historical Draught or Tablature of the Judgment of Hercules 1713 First printed in French in the November 1712 edition of the Journal des scavans as Raisonnement sur le tableau du jugement d Hercule selon l histoire de Prodicus It is in some copies of the 1714 edition of Characteristicks and most later ones Plasticks or the Original Progress and Power of Designatory Art Several Letters Written by a Noble Lord to a Young Man at the University London 1716 Letters from the Right Honourable the late Earl of Shaftesbury to Robert Molesworth Esq with two letters written by the late Sir John Cropley Ed with an introduction by John Toland London 1721 Letters of the Earl of Shaftesbury Collected into one volume London 1750 Notes edit a b c d Fowler amp Mitchell 1911 p 763 About The Clapham Historian Retrieved 4 April 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Klein Lawrence E Cooper Anthony Ashley third Earl of Shaftesbury 1671 1713 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 6209 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Environs of London Being an Historical Account of the Towns Villages and Hamlets Within Twelve Miles of that Capital Interspersed with Biographical Anecdotes T Cadell and W Davies 1811 pp 110 111 a b Fowler amp Mitchell 1911 pp 763 764 Electronic Enlightenment John Freke to John Locke www e enlightenment com 2019 doi 10 13051 ee doc lockjoou0080384b1c Retrieved 31 December 2020 a b c d e f g h i j Fowler amp Mitchell 1911 p 764 a b c d e Lord Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury entry by Michael B Gill in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 9 September 2016 Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper of 1711 Characteristicks of Men Manners Opinions Times s n Willey Basil 1964 The English Moralists Chatto amp Windus p 227 Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper of 1711 Characteristicks of Men Manners Opinions Times s n Richard B Wolf The Publication of Shaftesbury s Letter concerning Enthusiasm Studies in Bibliography Vol 32 1979 pp 236 241 at pp 236 237 Published by Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia JSTOR 40371706 Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper of 1711 Characteristicks of Men Manners Opinions Times s n p 57 Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper of 1711 Characteristicks of Men Manners Opinions Times s n p 151 Anthony Ashley Cooper Third Earl of Shaftesbury on the Emotions entry by Amy M Schmitter in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2010 John G Hayman The Evolution of The Moralists The Modern Language Review Vol 64 No 4 Oct 1969 pp 728 733 at p 728 Published by Modern Humanities Research Association JSTOR 3723913 Brett R L 2020 The Third Earl of Shaftesbury A Study in Eighteenth Century Literary Theory Routledge p 290 ISBN 978 1 000 03127 0 Israel Jonathan I 2002 Radical Enlightenment Philosophy and the Making of Modernity 1650 1750 OUP Oxford pp 625 626 ISBN 9780191622878 Fowler amp Mitchell 1911 p 765 Cites Inquiry concerning Virtue or Merit Bk II ii 1 Sambrook James 2014 The Eighteenth Century The Intellectual and Cultural Context of English Literature 1700 1789 Routledge p 70 ISBN 978 1 317 89324 0 Bombaro John J 2011 Jonathan Edwards s Vision of Reality The Relationship of God to the World Redemption History and the Reprobate Wipf and Stock Publishers p 59 ISBN 978 1 63087 812 2 a b c d e f Fowler amp Mitchell 1911 p 765 Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of 1977 An Inquiry Concerning Virtue Or Merit Manchester University Press p xv ISBN 978 0 7190 0657 9 Vicchio Stephen J 2007 Jefferson s Religion Wipf and Stock Publishers p 60 ISBN 978 1 59752 830 6 Chisick Harvey 2005 Historical Dictionary of the Enlightenment Scarecrow Press p 385 ISBN 978 0 8108 6548 8 Bullard Paddy 2019 The Oxford Handbook of Eighteenth Century Satire Oxford University Press p 578 ISBN 978 0 19 872783 5 Fiering Norman 2006 Jonathan Edwards s Moral Thought and Its British Context Wipf and Stock Publishers p 109 note8 ISBN 978 1 59752 618 0 Amir Lydia B 2014 Humor and the Good Life in Modern Philosophy Shaftesbury Hamann Kierkegaard SUNY Press p 41 ISBN 978 1 4384 4938 8 Alfred Owen Aldridge Shaftesbury and the Test of Truth PMLA Vol 60 No 1 Mar 1945 pp 129 156 at p 129 Published by Modern Language Association JSTOR 459126 On Pope William E Alderman Pope s Essay on Man and Shaftesbury s The Moralists The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America Vol 67 No 2 Second Quarter 1973 pp 131 140 Published by The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Bibliographical Society of America JSTOR 24301749 Darwall Stephen Stephen Darwall 1995 The British Moralists and the Internal Ought 1640 1740 Cambridge University Press p 219 and note 25 ISBN 978 0 521 45782 8 Haakonssen Knud 1996 Natural Law and Moral Philosophy From Grotius to the Scottish Enlightenment Cambridge University Press pp 231 232 ISBN 978 0 521 49802 9 Skorupski John 2010 The Routledge Companion to Ethics Routledge p 114 ISBN 978 1 136 96422 0 Joseph J Ellis III The Philosophy of Samuel Johnson The William and Mary Quarterly Vol 28 No 1 Jan 1971 pp 26 45 at p 44 Published by Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture JSTOR 1925118 Staves Susan 2006 A Literary History of Women s Writing in Britain 1660 1789 Cambridge University Press pp 237 238 ISBN 978 1 139 45858 0 Staves Susan 2006 A Literary History of Women s Writing in Britain 1660 1789 Cambridge University Press p 240 ISBN 978 1 139 45858 0 Alfred Owen Aldridge Shaftesbury and the Deist Manifesto Transactions of the American Philosophical Society Vol 41 No 2 1951 pp 297 382 at p 376 Published by American Philosophical Society JSTOR 1005651 Sabor Peter Schellenberg Betty A 2017 Samuel Richardson in Context Cambridge University Press p 252 ISBN 978 1 108 32716 9 Ross Ian Campbell 2001 Laurence Sterne A Life Oxford University Press p 418 ISBN 978 0 19 212235 3 Gjesdal Kristin 2017 Herder s Hermeneutics History Poetry Enlightenment Cambridge University Press p 112 and note 27 ISBN 978 1 107 11286 5 Palmer Joy Bresler Liora Cooper David 2002 Fifty Major Thinkers on Education From Confucius to Dewey Routledge p 81 ISBN 978 1 134 73594 5 Erdmann Johann Eduard 2004 A History of Philosophy Psychology Press p 123 ISBN 978 0 415 29542 0 Anthony Ashley Cooper 1671 1713 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury Art UK Retrieved 18 December 2020 Voitle Robert 1984 The third Earl of Shaftesbury 1671 1713 Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press pp 417 418 ISBN 0807111392 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Fowler Thomas Mitchell John Malcolm 1911 Shaftesbury Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd Earl of In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 763 765 Further reading editCooper Anthony Ashley Earl of Shaftesbury An Inquiry Concerning Virtue London 1699 Facsimile ed introd Joseph Filonowicz 1991 Scholars Facsimiles amp Reprints ISBN 978 0 8201 1455 2 David Walford editor An Inquiry Concerning Virtue or Merit A selection of material from Toland s 1699 edition with introduction Robert B Voitle The third Earl of Shaftesbury 1671 1713 Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press c 1984 Edward Chaney 2000 George Berkeley s Grand Tours The Immaterialist as Connoisseur of Art and Architecture in E Chaney The Evolution of the Grand Tour Anglo Italian Cultural Relations since the Renaissance 2nd ed London Routledge Watson Paula Lancaster Henry ASHLEY Anthony Lord Ashley 1671 1713 of Wimborne St Giles Dorset History of Parliament Online Retrieved 18 January 2023 Smith George H 2008 Shaftesbury Third Earl of 1671 1713 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute p 462 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n282 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 External links edit nbsp Works by or about Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury at Wikisource nbsp Quotations related to Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury at Wikiquote Shaftesbury s Characteristicks in three parts Contains the five treatises in Shaftesbury s Characteristicks slightly modified for easier reading The Third Earl of Shaftesbury an article by John McAteer in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2011Parliament of EnglandPreceded bySir Nathaniel Napier BtSir John Trenchard Member of Parliament for Poolewith Sir Nathaniel Napier Bt1695 1698 Succeeded byWilliam JoliffeSir William PhippardPeerage of EnglandPreceded byAnthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury1699 1713 Succeeded byAnthony Ashley CooperPortals nbsp Books nbsp Economics nbsp England nbsp Liberalism nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Philosophy nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anthony Ashley Cooper 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury amp oldid 1210537657 Works, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.