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Scottish Enlightenment

The Scottish Enlightenment (Scots: Scots Enlichtenment, Scottish Gaelic: Soillseachadh na h-Alba) was the period in 18th- and early-19th-century Scotland characterised by an outpouring of intellectual and scientific accomplishments. By the eighteenth century, Scotland had a network of parish schools in the Scottish Lowlands and five universities. The Enlightenment culture was based on close readings of new books, and intense discussions which took place daily at such intellectual gathering places in Edinburgh as The Select Society and, later, The Poker Club, as well as within Scotland's ancient universities (St Andrews, Glasgow, Edinburgh, King's College, and Marischal College).[1][2]

David Hume and Adam Smith on the Scottish National Portrait Gallery

Sharing the humanist and rational outlook of the Western Enlightenment of the same time period, the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment asserted the importance of human reason combined with a rejection of any authority that could not be justified by reason. In Scotland, the Enlightenment was characterised by a thoroughgoing empiricism and practicality where the chief values were improvement, virtue, and practical benefit for the individual and society as a whole.

Among the fields that rapidly advanced were philosophy, political economy, engineering, architecture, medicine, geology, archaeology, botany and zoology, law, agriculture, chemistry and sociology. Among the Scottish thinkers and scientists of the period were Joseph Black, James Boswell, Robert Burns, William Cullen, Adam Ferguson, David Hume, Francis Hutcheson, James Hutton, Lord Monboddo, John Playfair, Thomas Reid, Adam Smith, and Dugald Stewart.

The Scottish Enlightenment had effects far beyond Scotland, not only because of the esteem in which Scottish achievements were held outside Scotland, but also because its ideas and attitudes were carried all over Great Britain and across the Western world as part of the Scottish diaspora, and by foreign students who studied in Scotland.

Background edit

Union with England in 1707 meant the end of the Scottish Parliament. The parliamentarians, politicians, aristocrats, and placemen moved to London. Scottish law remained entirely separate from English law, so the civil law courts, lawyers and jurists remained in Edinburgh. The headquarters and leadership of the Church of Scotland also remained, as did the universities and the medical establishment. The lawyers and the divines, together with the professors, intellectuals, medical men, scientists and architects formed a new middle class elite that dominated urban Scotland and facilitated the Scottish Enlightenment.[3][4]

Economic growth edit

At the union of 1707, England had about five times the population of Scotland and about 36 times as much wealth, but there were five Scottish universities (St. Andrews, Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Aberdeen's King's College and Marischal College) against two in England. Scotland experienced the beginnings of economic expansion that allowed it to close this gap.[5] Contacts with England led to a conscious attempt to improve agriculture among the gentry and nobility. Although some estate holders improved the quality of life of their displaced workers, enclosures led to unemployment and forced migrations to the burghs or abroad.[6] The major change in international trade was the rapid expansion of the Americas as a market.[7] Glasgow particularly benefited from this new trade; initially supplying the colonies with manufactured goods, it emerged as the focus of the tobacco trade, re-exporting particularly to France. The merchants dealing in this lucrative business became the wealthy tobacco lords, who dominated the city for most of the eighteenth century.[8] Banking also developed in this period. The Bank of Scotland, founded in 1695 was suspected of Jacobite sympathies, and so a rival Royal Bank of Scotland was founded in 1727. Local banks began to be established in burghs like Glasgow and Ayr. These made capital available for business, and the improvement of roads and trade.[9]

Education system edit

The humanist-inspired emphasis on education in Scotland culminated in the passing of the Education Act 1496, which decreed that all sons of barons and freeholders of substance should attend grammar schools.[10] The aims of a network of parish schools were taken up as part of the Protestant programme in the 16th century and a series of acts of the Privy Council and Parliament in 1616, 1633, 1646 and 1696 attempted to support its development and finance.[11] By the late 17th century there was a largely complete network of parish schools in the Lowlands, but in the Highlands basic education was still lacking in many areas.[12] One of the effects of this extensive network of schools was the growth of the "democratic myth", which in the 19th century created the widespread belief that many a "lad of pairts" had been able to rise up through the system to take high office, and that literacy was much more widespread in Scotland than in neighbouring states, particularly England.[12] Historians are now divided over whether the ability of boys who pursued this route to social advancement was any different than that in other comparable nations, because the education in some parish schools was basic and short, and attendance was not compulsory.[13] Regardless of what the literacy rate actually was, it is clear that many Scottish students learned a useful form of visual literacy that allowed them to organise and remember information in a superior fashion.[14][15]

By the 17th century, Scotland had five universities, compared with England's two. After the disruption of the civil wars (Wars of the Three Kingdoms), Commonwealth and purges at the Restoration, they recovered with a lecture-based curriculum that was able to embrace economics and science, offering a high quality liberal education to the sons of the nobility and gentry.[12] All saw the establishment or re-establishment of chairs of mathematics. Observatories were built at St. Andrews and at King's and Marischal colleges in Aberdeen. Robert Sibbald (1641–1722) was appointed as the first Professor of Medicine at Edinburgh, and he co-founded the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in 1681.[16] These developments helped the universities to become major centres of medical education and would put Scotland at the forefront of new thinking.[12] By the end of the century, the University of Edinburgh's Medical School was arguably one of the leading centres of science in Europe, boasting such names as the anatomist Alexander Monro (secundus), the chemists William Cullen and Joseph Black,[17] and the natural historian John Walker.[18] By the 18th century, access to Scottish universities was probably more open than in contemporary England, Germany or France. Attendance was less expensive and the student body more socially representative.[19] In the eighteenth century Scotland reaped the intellectual benefits of this system.[20]

Intellectual climate edit

In France, the Enlightenment was based in the salons and culminated in the great Encyclopédie (1751–1772) edited by Denis Diderot and (until 1759) Jean le Rond d'Alembert (1713–1784) with contributions by hundreds of leading intellectuals such as Voltaire (1694–1778), Rousseau (1712–1778)[21] and Montesquieu (1689–1755). Some 25,000 copies of the 35-volume set were sold, half of them outside France. In Scottish intellectual life the culture was oriented towards books.[clarification needed][22] In 1763 Edinburgh had six printing houses and three paper mills; by 1783 there were 16 printing houses and 12 paper mills.[23]

Intellectual life revolved around a series of clubs, beginning in Edinburgh in the 1710s. One of the first was the Easy Club, co-founded In Edinburgh by the Jacobite printer Thomas Ruddiman. Clubs did not reach Glasgow until the 1740s. One of the first and most important in the city was the Political Economy Club, aimed at creating links between academics and merchants,[24] of which noted economist Adam Smith was a prominent early member.[25] Other clubs in Edinburgh included The Select Society, formed by the younger Allan Ramsay, a prominent artist, and philosophers David Hume and Adam Smith[26] and, later, The Poker Club, formed in 1762 and named by Adam Ferguson for the aim to "poke up" opinion on the militia issue.[27]

Historian Jonathan Israel argues that by 1750 Scotland's major cities had created an intellectual infrastructure of mutually supporting institutions, such as universities, reading societies, libraries, periodicals, museums and masonic lodges. The Scottish network was "predominantly liberal Calvinist, Newtonian, and 'design' oriented in character which played a major role in the further development of the transatlantic Enlightenment".[20][28] Bruce Lenman says their "central achievement was a new capacity to recognize and interpret social patterns."[29]

The Scottish Enlightenment owed much to the highly literate culture of Scottish Presbyterianism. Established as the Church of Scotland following the Revolution of 1688, the Presbyterians supported the 1707 Act of Union, and the protestant Hanoverian monarchy. The eighteenth century saw divisions and dispute between hard-line traditional Calvinists, Enlightenment influenced Moderates, and increasingly popular Evangelicals. Moderate clergy, with their emphasis on reason, toleration, morality and polite manners, were ascendant in the universities. Some of the leading intellectual lights of the Scottish Enlightenment were Presbyterian ministers, such as William Robertson (1721–93), historian and principal of the University of Edinburgh. The careers of sceptics, such as Adam Smith and David Hume, owed much to the tolerance, support and friendship of Moderate clergy.

Such was the reputation of the Scottish clergy for their Enlightenment values that a friend in England asked the Rev. James Wodrow, a minister in Ayrshire, whether two thirds of the Scottish clergy were in reality Deists. Wodrow dismissed the suggestion, and observed that “I cannot imagine the number of Deists among us bear almost any proportion at all to the rest. A few about Edinburgh in east Lothian & in the Merse by reading David Hume’s books & by their conversation & connexions with him & his friends, to whom you may add a scatered Clergyman or two here & there in other parts of [the] Country who has happened to get his education among that set of people; are all you can reckon upon & it is no way difficult to account for their forsaking the faith … & loving a present World & the mode of thinking fashionable in it.” (James Wodrow to Samuel Kenrick, 25 January 1769).[30]

Major intellectual areas edit

Empiricism and inductive reasoning edit

The first major philosopher of the Scottish Enlightenment was Francis Hutcheson (1694–1746), who was professor of moral philosophy at Glasgow from 1729 to 1746. He was an important link between the ideas of Shaftesbury and the later school of Scottish Common Sense Realism, developing Utilitarianism and Consequentialist thinking.[31] Also influenced by Shaftesbury was George Turnbull (1698–1748), who was regent at Marischal College, Aberdeen, and who published pioneering work in the fields of Christian ethics, art and education.[32]

David Hume (1711–76) whose Treatise on Human Nature (1738) and Essays, Moral and Political (1741) helped outline the parameters of philosophical Empiricism and Scepticism.[31] He would be a major influence on later Enlightenment figures including Adam Smith, Immanuel Kant and Jeremy Bentham.[33] Hume's argument that there were no efficient causes hidden in nature was supported and developed by Thomas Brown (1778–1820), who was Dugald Stewart's (1753–1828) successor at Edinburgh and who would be a major influence on later philosophers including John Stuart Mill.[34]

In contrast to Hume, Thomas Reid (1710–96), a student of Turnbull's, along with minister George Campbell (1719–96) and writer and moralist James Beattie (1735–1803), formulated Common Sense Realism.[35] Reid set out his theories in An Inquiry into the Human Mind on the Principles of Common Sense (1764).[36] This approach argued that there are certain concepts, such as human existence, the existence of solid objects and some basic moral "first principles", that are intrinsic to the make up of man and from which all subsequent arguments and systems of morality must be derived. It can be seen as an attempt to reconcile the new scientific developments of the Enlightenment with religious belief.[37]

Literature edit

Major literary figures originating in Scotland in this period included James Boswell (1740–95), whose An Account of Corsica (1768) and The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides (1785) drew on his extensive travels and whose Life of Samuel Johnson (1791) is a major source on one of the English Enlightenment's major men of letters and his circle.[38] Allan Ramsay (1686–1758) laid the foundations of a reawakening of interest in older Scottish literature, as well as leading the trend for pastoral poetry, helping to develop the Habbie stanza as a poetic form.[39] The lawyer Henry Home, Lord Kames (1696–1782) made a major contribution to the study of literature with Elements of Criticism (1762), which became the standard textbook on rhetoric and style.[40]

Hugh Blair (1718–1800) was a minister of the Church of Scotland and held the Chair of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at the University of Edinburgh. He produced an edition of the works of Shakespeare and is best known for Sermons (1777–1801), a five-volume endorsement of practical Christian morality, and Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres (1783). The former fused the oratorical arts of humanism with a sophisticated theory on the relationship between cognition and the origins of language.[41] It influenced many leading thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment, including Adam Smith and Dugald Stewart.

Blair was one of the figures who first drew attention to the Ossian cycle of James Macpherson to public attention.[42] Macpherson (1736–96) was the first Scottish poet to gain an international reputation. Claiming to have found poetry written by the ancient bard Ossian, he published "translations" that were proclaimed as a Celtic equivalent of the Classical epics. Fingal, written in 1762, was speedily translated into many European languages, and its appreciation of natural beauty and treatment of the ancient legend has been credited more than any single work with bringing about the Romantic movement in European, and especially in German literature, through its influence on Johann Gottfried von Herder and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.[43] Eventually it became clear that the poems were not direct translations from the Gaelic, but flowery adaptations made to suit the aesthetic expectations of his audience.[44]

Before Robert Burns (1759–96) the most important Scottish language poet was Robert Fergusson (1750–74), who also worked in English. His work often celebrated his native Edinburgh and Enlightenment conviviality, as in his best known poem "Auld Reekie" (1773).[45] Burns, an Ayrshire poet and lyricist, is now widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and became a major figure in the Romantic movement. As well as making original compositions, Burns also collected folk songs from across Scotland, often revising or adapting them.[46] Burns's poetry drew upon a substantial familiarity with and knowledge of Classical, Biblical, and English literature, as well as the Scottish Makar tradition.[47]

Economics edit

Adam Smith developed and published The Wealth of Nations, the starting point of modern economics.[48] This study, which had an immediate impact on British economic policy, still frames discussions on globalisation and tariffs.[49] The book identified land, labour, and capital as the three factors of production and the major contributors to a nation's wealth, as distinct from the Physiocratic idea that only agriculture was productive. Smith discussed potential benefits of specialisation by division of labour, including increased labour productivity and gains from trade, whether between town and country or across countries.[50] His "theorem" that "the division of labor is limited by the extent of the market" has been described as the "core of a theory of the functions of firm and industry" and a "fundamental principle of economic organization."[51] In an argument that includes "one of the most famous passages in all economics,"[52] Smith represents every individual as trying to employ any capital they might command for their own advantage, not that of the society,[53] and for the sake of profit, which is necessary at some level for employing capital in domestic industry, and positively related to the value of produce.[54] Economists have linked Smith's invisible-hand concept to his concern for the common man and woman through economic growth and development,[55] enabling higher levels of consumption, which Smith describes as "the sole end and purpose of all production."[56][57]

Sociology and anthropology edit

Scottish Enlightenment thinkers developed what leading thinkers such as James Burnett, Lord Monboddo (1714–99) and Lord Kames called a science of man,[58] which was expressed historically in the work of thinkers such as James Burnett, Adam Ferguson, John Millar, William Robertson and John Walker, all of whom merged a scientific study of how humans behave in ancient and primitive cultures, with an awareness of the determining forces of modernity. Modern notions of visual anthropology permeated the lectures of leading Scottish academics like Hugh Blair,[59] and Alan Swingewood argues that modern sociology largely originated in Scotland.[60] James Burnett is most famous today as a founder of modern comparative historical linguistics. He was the first major figure to argue that mankind had evolved language skills in response to his changing environment and social structures.[61] He was one of a number of scholars involved in the development of early concepts of evolution and has been credited with anticipating in principle the idea of natural selection that was developed into a scientific theory by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace.[62]

Mathematics, science and medicine edit

One of the central pillars of the Scottish Enlightenment was scientific and medical knowledge. Many of the key thinkers were trained as physicians or had studied science and medicine at university or on their own at some point in their career. Likewise, there was a notable presence of university medically-trained professionals, especially physicians, apothecaries, surgeons and even ministers, who lived in provincial settings.[63] Unlike England or other European countries like France or Austria, the intelligentsia of Scotland were not beholden to powerful aristocratic patrons and this led them to see science through the eyes of utility, improvement and reform.[64]

Colin Maclaurin (1698–1746) was appointed as chair of mathematics by the age of 19 at Marischal College, and was the leading British mathematician of his era.[31] Mathematician and physicist Sir John Leslie (1766–1832) is chiefly noted for his experiments with heat and was the first person to artificially create ice.[65]

Other major figures in science included William Cullen (1710–90), physician and chemist, James Anderson (1739–1808), agronomist. Joseph Black (1728–99), physicist and chemist, discovered carbon dioxide (fixed air) and latent heat,[66] and developed what many consider to be the first chemical formulae.[67]

James Hutton (1726–97) was the first modern geologist, with his Theory of the Earth (1795) challenging existing ideas about the age of the Earth.[68][69] His ideas were popularised by the scientist and mathematician John Playfair (1748–1819).[70] Prior to James Hutton, Rev. David Ure then minister to East Kilbride Parish was the first to represent the shells 'entrochi' in illustrations and make accounts of the geology of southern Scotland. The findings of David Ure were influential enough to inspire the Scottish endeavour to the recording and interpretation of natural history and Fossils, a major part of the Scottish Enlightenment.[71][72]

Edinburgh became a major centre of medical teaching and research.[73]

Significance edit

Representative of the far-reaching impact of the Scottish Enlightenment was the new Encyclopædia Britannica, which was designed in Edinburgh by Colin Macfarquhar, Andrew Bell and others. It was first published in three volumes between 1768 and 1771, with 2,659 pages and 160 engravings, and quickly became a standard reference work in the English-speaking world. The fourth edition (1810) ran to 16,000 pages in 20 volumes. The Encyclopaedia continued to be published in Edinburgh until 1898, when it was sold to an American publisher.[74]

Cultural influence edit

The Scottish Enlightenment had numerous dimensions, influencing the culture of the nation in several areas including architecture, art and music.[75]

Scotland produced some of the most significant architects of the period who were involved in the intellectual culture of the Enlightenment. Robert Adam (1728–92) was an interior designer as well as an architect, with his brothers developing the Adam style,[76] He influenced the development of architecture in Britain, Western Europe, North America and in Russia.[77][78] Adam's main rival was William Chambers, another Scot, but born in Sweden.[79] Chambers was appointed architectural tutor to the Prince of Wales, later George III, and in 1766, with Robert Adam, as Architect to the King.[80][81]

Artists included John Alexander and his younger contemporary William Mossman (1700–71). They painted many of the figures of early-Enlightenment Edinburgh.[82] The leading Scottish artist of the late eighteenth century, Allan Ramsay, studied in Sweden, London and Italy before basing himself in Edinburgh, where he established himself as a leading portrait painter to the Scottish nobility and he undertook portraits of many of the major figures of the Scottish Enlightenment, including his friend the philosopher David Hume and the visiting Jean-Jacques Rousseau.[83] Gavin Hamilton (1723–98) spent almost his entire career in Italy and emerged as a pioneering neo-classical painter of historical and mythical themes, including his depictions of scenes from Homer's Iliad, as well as acting as an informal tutor to British artists and as an early archaeologist and antiquarian.[84] Many of his works can be seen as Enlightenment speculations about the origins of society and politics, including the Death of Lucretia (1768), an event thought to be critical to the birth of the Roman Republic. His classicism would be a major influence on French artist Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825).[85]

The growth of a musical culture in the capital was marked by the incorporation of the Musical Society of Edinburgh in 1728.[86] Scottish composers known to be active in this period include: Alexander Munro (fl. c. 1732), James Foulis (1710–73) and Charles McLean (fl. c. 1737).[87] Thomas Erskine, 6th Earl of Kellie (1732–81) was one of the most important British composers of his era, and the first Scot known to have produced a symphony.[88] In the mid-eighteenth century, a group of Scottish composers began to respond to Allan Ramsey's call to "own and refine" their own musical tradition, creating what James Johnson has characterised as the "Scots drawing room style", taking primarily Lowland Scottish tunes and adding simple figured basslines and other features from Italian music that made them acceptable to a middle-class audience. It gained momentum when major Scottish composers like James Oswald (1710–69) and William McGibbon (1690–1756) became involved around 1740. Oswald's Curious Collection of Scottish Songs (1740) was one of the first to include Gaelic tunes alongside Lowland ones, setting a fashion common by the middle of the century and helping to create a unified Scottish musical identity. However, with changing fashions there was a decline in the publication of collections of specifically Scottish collections of tunes, in favour of their incorporation into British collections.[89]

Wider impact edit

While the Scottish Enlightenment is traditionally considered to have concluded toward the end of the 18th century,[58] disproportionately large Scottish contributions to British science and letters continued for another 50 years or more, thanks to such figures as Thomas Carlyle, James Watt, William Murdoch, James Clerk Maxwell, Lord Kelvin and Sir Walter Scott.[90] The influence of the movement spread beyond Scotland across the British Empire, and onto the Continent. The political ideas had an important impact on the Founding Fathers of the United States, which broke away from the empire in 1775.[91][92][93] The philosophy of Common Sense Realism was especially influential in 19th century American thought and religion.[94]

In traditional historiography, the Scottish Enlightenment was long identified with abolitionism due to the writings of some of its members and the rarity of enslaved people in Scotland. However, academic John Stewart argues that due to the fact that many members of the Scottish Enlightenment were involved in supporting slavery and scientific racism (a consequence, he argues, of Scotland's disproportionate involvement in the Atlantic slave trade), "the development of eighteenth-century chemistry and the broader intellectual [Scottish] Enlightenment were inextricably entangled with the economic Improvement Movement and the colonial economy of the British slave trade."[95]

Cultural representations edit

The Scottish dramatist Robert McLellan (1907-1985) wrote a number of full-length stage comedies which give a self-conscious representation of Edinburgh at the height of the Scottish enlightenment, most notably The Flouers o Edinburgh (1957). These plays include references to many of the figures historically associated with the movement and satirise various social tensions, particularly in the field of spoken language, between traditional society and anglicised Scots who presented themselves as exponents of so-called 'new manners'. Other later examples include Young Auchinleck (1962), a stage portrait of the young James Boswell, and The Hypocrite (1967) which draws attention to conservative religious reaction in the country that threatened to check enlightenment trends. McLellan's picture of these tensions in national terms is complex, even-handed and multi-faceted.[96]

Key figures edit

Plus those who visited and corresponded with Scottish scholars:[69]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Allan, David, Virtue, Learning and the Scottish Enlightenment: Ideas of Scholarship in Early Modern History, Edinburgh University Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-7486-0438-8.
  • Amrozowicz, Michael C. " Scottish Enlightenment Histories of Social Organization

" Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture Vol. 48, 2019 pp. 161–186 10.1353/sec.2019.0011

  • Berry, C. J., Social Theory Of The Scottish Enlightenment, Edinburgh University Press 1997, ISBN 0-7486-0864-8.
  • Broadie, Alexander. The Scottish Enlightenment: The Historical Age of the Historical Nation. Birlinn 2002. Paperback: ISBN 1-84158-151-8, ISBN 978-1-84158-151-4.
  • Broadie, Alexander, ed. The Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment. (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy) Cambridge University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0-521-00323-0.
  • Bruce, Duncan A. The Mark of the Scots: Their Astonishing Contributions to History, Science, Democracy, Literature, and the Arts. 1996. Hardcover: ISBN 1-55972-356-4, ISBN 978-1-55972-356-5. Citadel, Kensington Books, 2000. Paperback: ISBN 0-8065-2060-4, ISBN 978-0-8065-2060-5.
  • Buchan, James Crowded With Genius: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind. (Harper Perennial, 2004). ISBN 978-0-06-055889-5.
  • Campbell, R. H. and Andrew S. Skinner, eds. The Origins and Nature of the Scottish Enlightenment (1982), 12 essays by scholars, esp. on history of science
  • Daiches, David, Peter Jones and Jean Jones. A Hotbed of Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment, 1730–1790 (1986), 170 pp; well-illustrated introduction
  • Derry, J. F. Darwin in Scotland: Edinburgh, Evolution and Enlightenment. Whittles Publishing, 2009. Paperback: ISBN 1-904445-57-8.
  • Daiches, David, Peter Jones, Jean Jones (eds). A Hotbed of Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment 1731–1790. (Edinburgh University Press, 1986); ISBN 0-85411-069-0
  • Dunyach, Jean-François and Ann Thomson, eds. The Enlightenment in Scotland: national and international perspectives (2015)
  • Eddy, Matthew Daniel. The Language of Mineralogy: John Walker, Chemistry and the Edinburgh Medical School, 1750–1800 (2008).
  • Goldie, Mark. "The Scottish Catholic Enlightenment," The Journal of British Studies Vol. 30, No. 1 (Jan. 1991), pp. 20–62 in JSTOR
  • Graham, Gordon. "Morality and Feeling in the Scottish Enlightenment," Philosophy Vol. 76, No. 296 (Apr. 2001), pp. 271–82 in JSTOR
  • Herman, Arthur. How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World & Everything in It (Crown Publishing Group, 2001), ISBN 0-609-80999-7.
  • Hook, Andrew (ed.) The History of Scottish Literature. Vol. 2. 1660–1800 (Aberdeen, 1987).
  • Israel, Jonathan "Scottish Enlightenment and Man's 'Progress'" ch 9 in Democratic Enlightenment: Philosophy, Revolution, and Human Rights 1750–1790 (2011) pp. 233–69 excerpt and text search
  • Lenman, Bruce P. Enlightenment and Change: Scotland 1746–1832 (2nd ed. The New History of Scotland Series. Edinburgh University Press, 2009). 280 pp. ISBN 978-0-7486-2515-4; 1st edition also published under the titles Integration, Enlightenment, and Industrialization: Scotland, 1746–1832 (1981) and Integration and Enlightenment: Scotland, 1746–1832 (1992); general survey.
  • Scott, Paul H. (ed.) Scotland. A Concise Cultural History (Edinburgh, 1993).
  • Swingewood, Alan. "Origins of Sociology: The Case of the Scottish Enlightenment," The British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 21, No. 2 (June 1970), pp. 164–80 in JSTOR
  • Towsey, Mark R. M. Reading the Scottish Enlightenment: Books and Their Readers in Provincial Scotland, 1750–1820 (2010)

Primary sources edit

  • Broadie, Alexander, ed. The Scottish Enlightenment: An Anthology (1998), primary sources. excerpt and text search

External links edit

  • Northern Lights: How modern life emerged from eighteenth-century Edinburgh.
  • – an introduction (archived 26 October 2004)
  • Living philosophy – Philosophical play readings of the legacy of David Hume, Adam Smith and Robert Burns
  • Edinburgh Old Town Association – has references and links
  • "The Enlightenment in Scotland", BBC Radio 4 discussion with Tom Devine, Karen O'Brien and Alexander Broadie (In Our Time, Dec. 5, 2002)

scottish, enlightenment, scots, scots, enlichtenment, scottish, gaelic, soillseachadh, alba, period, 18th, early, 19th, century, scotland, characterised, outpouring, intellectual, scientific, accomplishments, eighteenth, century, scotland, network, parish, sch. The Scottish Enlightenment Scots Scots Enlichtenment Scottish Gaelic Soillseachadh na h Alba was the period in 18th and early 19th century Scotland characterised by an outpouring of intellectual and scientific accomplishments By the eighteenth century Scotland had a network of parish schools in the Scottish Lowlands and five universities The Enlightenment culture was based on close readings of new books and intense discussions which took place daily at such intellectual gathering places in Edinburgh as The Select Society and later The Poker Club as well as within Scotland s ancient universities St Andrews Glasgow Edinburgh King s College and Marischal College 1 2 David Hume and Adam Smith on the Scottish National Portrait GallerySharing the humanist and rational outlook of the Western Enlightenment of the same time period the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment asserted the importance of human reason combined with a rejection of any authority that could not be justified by reason In Scotland the Enlightenment was characterised by a thoroughgoing empiricism and practicality where the chief values were improvement virtue and practical benefit for the individual and society as a whole Among the fields that rapidly advanced were philosophy political economy engineering architecture medicine geology archaeology botany and zoology law agriculture chemistry and sociology Among the Scottish thinkers and scientists of the period were Joseph Black James Boswell Robert Burns William Cullen Adam Ferguson David Hume Francis Hutcheson James Hutton Lord Monboddo John Playfair Thomas Reid Adam Smith and Dugald Stewart The Scottish Enlightenment had effects far beyond Scotland not only because of the esteem in which Scottish achievements were held outside Scotland but also because its ideas and attitudes were carried all over Great Britain and across the Western world as part of the Scottish diaspora and by foreign students who studied in Scotland Contents 1 Background 1 1 Economic growth 1 2 Education system 1 3 Intellectual climate 2 Major intellectual areas 2 1 Empiricism and inductive reasoning 2 2 Literature 2 3 Economics 2 4 Sociology and anthropology 2 5 Mathematics science and medicine 3 Significance 3 1 Cultural influence 3 2 Wider impact 3 3 Cultural representations 4 Key figures 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 Primary sources 8 External linksBackground editUnion with England in 1707 meant the end of the Scottish Parliament The parliamentarians politicians aristocrats and placemen moved to London Scottish law remained entirely separate from English law so the civil law courts lawyers and jurists remained in Edinburgh The headquarters and leadership of the Church of Scotland also remained as did the universities and the medical establishment The lawyers and the divines together with the professors intellectuals medical men scientists and architects formed a new middle class elite that dominated urban Scotland and facilitated the Scottish Enlightenment 3 4 Economic growth edit Main article Economy of Scotland in the early modern era At the union of 1707 England had about five times the population of Scotland and about 36 times as much wealth but there were five Scottish universities St Andrews Glasgow Edinburgh and Aberdeen s King s College and Marischal College against two in England Scotland experienced the beginnings of economic expansion that allowed it to close this gap 5 Contacts with England led to a conscious attempt to improve agriculture among the gentry and nobility Although some estate holders improved the quality of life of their displaced workers enclosures led to unemployment and forced migrations to the burghs or abroad 6 The major change in international trade was the rapid expansion of the Americas as a market 7 Glasgow particularly benefited from this new trade initially supplying the colonies with manufactured goods it emerged as the focus of the tobacco trade re exporting particularly to France The merchants dealing in this lucrative business became the wealthy tobacco lords who dominated the city for most of the eighteenth century 8 Banking also developed in this period The Bank of Scotland founded in 1695 was suspected of Jacobite sympathies and so a rival Royal Bank of Scotland was founded in 1727 Local banks began to be established in burghs like Glasgow and Ayr These made capital available for business and the improvement of roads and trade 9 Education system edit Main article Education in early modern Scotland The humanist inspired emphasis on education in Scotland culminated in the passing of the Education Act 1496 which decreed that all sons of barons and freeholders of substance should attend grammar schools 10 The aims of a network of parish schools were taken up as part of the Protestant programme in the 16th century and a series of acts of the Privy Council and Parliament in 1616 1633 1646 and 1696 attempted to support its development and finance 11 By the late 17th century there was a largely complete network of parish schools in the Lowlands but in the Highlands basic education was still lacking in many areas 12 One of the effects of this extensive network of schools was the growth of the democratic myth which in the 19th century created the widespread belief that many a lad of pairts had been able to rise up through the system to take high office and that literacy was much more widespread in Scotland than in neighbouring states particularly England 12 Historians are now divided over whether the ability of boys who pursued this route to social advancement was any different than that in other comparable nations because the education in some parish schools was basic and short and attendance was not compulsory 13 Regardless of what the literacy rate actually was it is clear that many Scottish students learned a useful form of visual literacy that allowed them to organise and remember information in a superior fashion 14 15 By the 17th century Scotland had five universities compared with England s two After the disruption of the civil wars Wars of the Three Kingdoms Commonwealth and purges at the Restoration they recovered with a lecture based curriculum that was able to embrace economics and science offering a high quality liberal education to the sons of the nobility and gentry 12 All saw the establishment or re establishment of chairs of mathematics Observatories were built at St Andrews and at King s and Marischal colleges in Aberdeen Robert Sibbald 1641 1722 was appointed as the first Professor of Medicine at Edinburgh and he co founded the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in 1681 16 These developments helped the universities to become major centres of medical education and would put Scotland at the forefront of new thinking 12 By the end of the century the University of Edinburgh s Medical School was arguably one of the leading centres of science in Europe boasting such names as the anatomist Alexander Monro secundus the chemists William Cullen and Joseph Black 17 and the natural historian John Walker 18 By the 18th century access to Scottish universities was probably more open than in contemporary England Germany or France Attendance was less expensive and the student body more socially representative 19 In the eighteenth century Scotland reaped the intellectual benefits of this system 20 Intellectual climate edit In France the Enlightenment was based in the salons and culminated in the great Encyclopedie 1751 1772 edited by Denis Diderot and until 1759 Jean le Rond d Alembert 1713 1784 with contributions by hundreds of leading intellectuals such as Voltaire 1694 1778 Rousseau 1712 1778 21 and Montesquieu 1689 1755 Some 25 000 copies of the 35 volume set were sold half of them outside France In Scottish intellectual life the culture was oriented towards books clarification needed 22 In 1763 Edinburgh had six printing houses and three paper mills by 1783 there were 16 printing houses and 12 paper mills 23 Intellectual life revolved around a series of clubs beginning in Edinburgh in the 1710s One of the first was the Easy Club co founded In Edinburgh by the Jacobite printer Thomas Ruddiman Clubs did not reach Glasgow until the 1740s One of the first and most important in the city was the Political Economy Club aimed at creating links between academics and merchants 24 of which noted economist Adam Smith was a prominent early member 25 Other clubs in Edinburgh included The Select Society formed by the younger Allan Ramsay a prominent artist and philosophers David Hume and Adam Smith 26 and later The Poker Club formed in 1762 and named by Adam Ferguson for the aim to poke up opinion on the militia issue 27 Historian Jonathan Israel argues that by 1750 Scotland s major cities had created an intellectual infrastructure of mutually supporting institutions such as universities reading societies libraries periodicals museums and masonic lodges The Scottish network was predominantly liberal Calvinist Newtonian and design oriented in character which played a major role in the further development of the transatlantic Enlightenment 20 28 Bruce Lenman says their central achievement was a new capacity to recognize and interpret social patterns 29 The Scottish Enlightenment owed much to the highly literate culture of Scottish Presbyterianism Established as the Church of Scotland following the Revolution of 1688 the Presbyterians supported the 1707 Act of Union and the protestant Hanoverian monarchy The eighteenth century saw divisions and dispute between hard line traditional Calvinists Enlightenment influenced Moderates and increasingly popular Evangelicals Moderate clergy with their emphasis on reason toleration morality and polite manners were ascendant in the universities Some of the leading intellectual lights of the Scottish Enlightenment were Presbyterian ministers such as William Robertson 1721 93 historian and principal of the University of Edinburgh The careers of sceptics such as Adam Smith and David Hume owed much to the tolerance support and friendship of Moderate clergy Such was the reputation of the Scottish clergy for their Enlightenment values that a friend in England asked the Rev James Wodrow a minister in Ayrshire whether two thirds of the Scottish clergy were in reality Deists Wodrow dismissed the suggestion and observed that I cannot imagine the number of Deists among us bear almost any proportion at all to the rest A few about Edinburgh in east Lothian amp in the Merse by reading David Hume s books amp by their conversation amp connexions with him amp his friends to whom you may add a scatered Clergyman or two here amp there in other parts of the Country who has happened to get his education among that set of people are all you can reckon upon amp it is no way difficult to account for their forsaking the faith amp loving a present World amp the mode of thinking fashionable in it James Wodrow to Samuel Kenrick 25 January 1769 30 Major intellectual areas editEmpiricism and inductive reasoning edit This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Despite the heading this section lacks content on inductive reasoning Please help improve this section if you can September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The first major philosopher of the Scottish Enlightenment was Francis Hutcheson 1694 1746 who was professor of moral philosophy at Glasgow from 1729 to 1746 He was an important link between the ideas of Shaftesbury and the later school of Scottish Common Sense Realism developing Utilitarianism and Consequentialist thinking 31 Also influenced by Shaftesbury was George Turnbull 1698 1748 who was regent at Marischal College Aberdeen and who published pioneering work in the fields of Christian ethics art and education 32 David Hume 1711 76 whose Treatise on Human Nature 1738 and Essays Moral and Political 1741 helped outline the parameters of philosophical Empiricism and Scepticism 31 He would be a major influence on later Enlightenment figures including Adam Smith Immanuel Kant and Jeremy Bentham 33 Hume s argument that there were no efficient causes hidden in nature was supported and developed by Thomas Brown 1778 1820 who was Dugald Stewart s 1753 1828 successor at Edinburgh and who would be a major influence on later philosophers including John Stuart Mill 34 In contrast to Hume Thomas Reid 1710 96 a student of Turnbull s along with minister George Campbell 1719 96 and writer and moralist James Beattie 1735 1803 formulated Common Sense Realism 35 Reid set out his theories in An Inquiry into the Human Mind on the Principles of Common Sense 1764 36 This approach argued that there are certain concepts such as human existence the existence of solid objects and some basic moral first principles that are intrinsic to the make up of man and from which all subsequent arguments and systems of morality must be derived It can be seen as an attempt to reconcile the new scientific developments of the Enlightenment with religious belief 37 Literature edit Main article Scottish literature in the eighteenth century Major literary figures originating in Scotland in this period included James Boswell 1740 95 whose An Account of Corsica 1768 and The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides 1785 drew on his extensive travels and whose Life of Samuel Johnson 1791 is a major source on one of the English Enlightenment s major men of letters and his circle 38 Allan Ramsay 1686 1758 laid the foundations of a reawakening of interest in older Scottish literature as well as leading the trend for pastoral poetry helping to develop the Habbie stanza as a poetic form 39 The lawyer Henry Home Lord Kames 1696 1782 made a major contribution to the study of literature with Elements of Criticism 1762 which became the standard textbook on rhetoric and style 40 Hugh Blair 1718 1800 was a minister of the Church of Scotland and held the Chair of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at the University of Edinburgh He produced an edition of the works of Shakespeare and is best known for Sermons 1777 1801 a five volume endorsement of practical Christian morality and Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres 1783 The former fused the oratorical arts of humanism with a sophisticated theory on the relationship between cognition and the origins of language 41 It influenced many leading thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment including Adam Smith and Dugald Stewart Blair was one of the figures who first drew attention to the Ossian cycle of James Macpherson to public attention 42 Macpherson 1736 96 was the first Scottish poet to gain an international reputation Claiming to have found poetry written by the ancient bard Ossian he published translations that were proclaimed as a Celtic equivalent of the Classical epics Fingal written in 1762 was speedily translated into many European languages and its appreciation of natural beauty and treatment of the ancient legend has been credited more than any single work with bringing about the Romantic movement in European and especially in German literature through its influence on Johann Gottfried von Herder and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 43 Eventually it became clear that the poems were not direct translations from the Gaelic but flowery adaptations made to suit the aesthetic expectations of his audience 44 Before Robert Burns 1759 96 the most important Scottish language poet was Robert Fergusson 1750 74 who also worked in English His work often celebrated his native Edinburgh and Enlightenment conviviality as in his best known poem Auld Reekie 1773 45 Burns an Ayrshire poet and lyricist is now widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and became a major figure in the Romantic movement As well as making original compositions Burns also collected folk songs from across Scotland often revising or adapting them 46 Burns s poetry drew upon a substantial familiarity with and knowledge of Classical Biblical and English literature as well as the Scottish Makar tradition 47 Economics edit Adam Smith developed and published The Wealth of Nations the starting point of modern economics 48 This study which had an immediate impact on British economic policy still frames discussions on globalisation and tariffs 49 The book identified land labour and capital as the three factors of production and the major contributors to a nation s wealth as distinct from the Physiocratic idea that only agriculture was productive Smith discussed potential benefits of specialisation by division of labour including increased labour productivity and gains from trade whether between town and country or across countries 50 His theorem that the division of labor is limited by the extent of the market has been described as the core of a theory of the functions of firm and industry and a fundamental principle of economic organization 51 In an argument that includes one of the most famous passages in all economics 52 Smith represents every individual as trying to employ any capital they might command for their own advantage not that of the society 53 and for the sake of profit which is necessary at some level for employing capital in domestic industry and positively related to the value of produce 54 Economists have linked Smith s invisible hand concept to his concern for the common man and woman through economic growth and development 55 enabling higher levels of consumption which Smith describes as the sole end and purpose of all production 56 57 Sociology and anthropology edit Scottish Enlightenment thinkers developed what leading thinkers such as James Burnett Lord Monboddo 1714 99 and Lord Kames called a science of man 58 which was expressed historically in the work of thinkers such as James Burnett Adam Ferguson John Millar William Robertson and John Walker all of whom merged a scientific study of how humans behave in ancient and primitive cultures with an awareness of the determining forces of modernity Modern notions of visual anthropology permeated the lectures of leading Scottish academics like Hugh Blair 59 and Alan Swingewood argues that modern sociology largely originated in Scotland 60 James Burnett is most famous today as a founder of modern comparative historical linguistics He was the first major figure to argue that mankind had evolved language skills in response to his changing environment and social structures 61 He was one of a number of scholars involved in the development of early concepts of evolution and has been credited with anticipating in principle the idea of natural selection that was developed into a scientific theory by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace 62 Mathematics science and medicine edit One of the central pillars of the Scottish Enlightenment was scientific and medical knowledge Many of the key thinkers were trained as physicians or had studied science and medicine at university or on their own at some point in their career Likewise there was a notable presence of university medically trained professionals especially physicians apothecaries surgeons and even ministers who lived in provincial settings 63 Unlike England or other European countries like France or Austria the intelligentsia of Scotland were not beholden to powerful aristocratic patrons and this led them to see science through the eyes of utility improvement and reform 64 Colin Maclaurin 1698 1746 was appointed as chair of mathematics by the age of 19 at Marischal College and was the leading British mathematician of his era 31 Mathematician and physicist Sir John Leslie 1766 1832 is chiefly noted for his experiments with heat and was the first person to artificially create ice 65 Other major figures in science included William Cullen 1710 90 physician and chemist James Anderson 1739 1808 agronomist Joseph Black 1728 99 physicist and chemist discovered carbon dioxide fixed air and latent heat 66 and developed what many consider to be the first chemical formulae 67 James Hutton 1726 97 was the first modern geologist with his Theory of the Earth 1795 challenging existing ideas about the age of the Earth 68 69 His ideas were popularised by the scientist and mathematician John Playfair 1748 1819 70 Prior to James Hutton Rev David Ure then minister to East Kilbride Parish was the first to represent the shells entrochi in illustrations and make accounts of the geology of southern Scotland The findings of David Ure were influential enough to inspire the Scottish endeavour to the recording and interpretation of natural history and Fossils a major part of the Scottish Enlightenment 71 72 Edinburgh became a major centre of medical teaching and research 73 Significance editRepresentative of the far reaching impact of the Scottish Enlightenment was the new Encyclopaedia Britannica which was designed in Edinburgh by Colin Macfarquhar Andrew Bell and others It was first published in three volumes between 1768 and 1771 with 2 659 pages and 160 engravings and quickly became a standard reference work in the English speaking world The fourth edition 1810 ran to 16 000 pages in 20 volumes The Encyclopaedia continued to be published in Edinburgh until 1898 when it was sold to an American publisher 74 Cultural influence edit The Scottish Enlightenment had numerous dimensions influencing the culture of the nation in several areas including architecture art and music 75 Scotland produced some of the most significant architects of the period who were involved in the intellectual culture of the Enlightenment Robert Adam 1728 92 was an interior designer as well as an architect with his brothers developing the Adam style 76 He influenced the development of architecture in Britain Western Europe North America and in Russia 77 78 Adam s main rival was William Chambers another Scot but born in Sweden 79 Chambers was appointed architectural tutor to the Prince of Wales later George III and in 1766 with Robert Adam as Architect to the King 80 81 Artists included John Alexander and his younger contemporary William Mossman 1700 71 They painted many of the figures of early Enlightenment Edinburgh 82 The leading Scottish artist of the late eighteenth century Allan Ramsay studied in Sweden London and Italy before basing himself in Edinburgh where he established himself as a leading portrait painter to the Scottish nobility and he undertook portraits of many of the major figures of the Scottish Enlightenment including his friend the philosopher David Hume and the visiting Jean Jacques Rousseau 83 Gavin Hamilton 1723 98 spent almost his entire career in Italy and emerged as a pioneering neo classical painter of historical and mythical themes including his depictions of scenes from Homer s Iliad as well as acting as an informal tutor to British artists and as an early archaeologist and antiquarian 84 Many of his works can be seen as Enlightenment speculations about the origins of society and politics including the Death of Lucretia 1768 an event thought to be critical to the birth of the Roman Republic His classicism would be a major influence on French artist Jacques Louis David 1748 1825 85 The growth of a musical culture in the capital was marked by the incorporation of the Musical Society of Edinburgh in 1728 86 Scottish composers known to be active in this period include Alexander Munro fl c 1732 James Foulis 1710 73 and Charles McLean fl c 1737 87 Thomas Erskine 6th Earl of Kellie 1732 81 was one of the most important British composers of his era and the first Scot known to have produced a symphony 88 In the mid eighteenth century a group of Scottish composers began to respond to Allan Ramsey s call to own and refine their own musical tradition creating what James Johnson has characterised as the Scots drawing room style taking primarily Lowland Scottish tunes and adding simple figured basslines and other features from Italian music that made them acceptable to a middle class audience It gained momentum when major Scottish composers like James Oswald 1710 69 and William McGibbon 1690 1756 became involved around 1740 Oswald s Curious Collection of Scottish Songs 1740 was one of the first to include Gaelic tunes alongside Lowland ones setting a fashion common by the middle of the century and helping to create a unified Scottish musical identity However with changing fashions there was a decline in the publication of collections of specifically Scottish collections of tunes in favour of their incorporation into British collections 89 Wider impact edit While the Scottish Enlightenment is traditionally considered to have concluded toward the end of the 18th century 58 disproportionately large Scottish contributions to British science and letters continued for another 50 years or more thanks to such figures as Thomas Carlyle James Watt William Murdoch James Clerk Maxwell Lord Kelvin and Sir Walter Scott 90 The influence of the movement spread beyond Scotland across the British Empire and onto the Continent The political ideas had an important impact on the Founding Fathers of the United States which broke away from the empire in 1775 91 92 93 The philosophy of Common Sense Realism was especially influential in 19th century American thought and religion 94 In traditional historiography the Scottish Enlightenment was long identified with abolitionism due to the writings of some of its members and the rarity of enslaved people in Scotland However academic John Stewart argues that due to the fact that many members of the Scottish Enlightenment were involved in supporting slavery and scientific racism a consequence he argues of Scotland s disproportionate involvement in the Atlantic slave trade the development of eighteenth century chemistry and the broader intellectual Scottish Enlightenment were inextricably entangled with the economic Improvement Movement and the colonial economy of the British slave trade 95 Cultural representations edit The Scottish dramatist Robert McLellan 1907 1985 wrote a number of full length stage comedies which give a self conscious representation of Edinburgh at the height of the Scottish enlightenment most notably The Flouers o Edinburgh 1957 These plays include references to many of the figures historically associated with the movement and satirise various social tensions particularly in the field of spoken language between traditional society and anglicised Scots who presented themselves as exponents of so called new manners Other later examples include Young Auchinleck 1962 a stage portrait of the young James Boswell and The Hypocrite 1967 which draws attention to conservative religious reaction in the country that threatened to check enlightenment trends McLellan s picture of these tensions in national terms is complex even handed and multi faceted 96 Key figures editWilliam Adam 1689 1748 architect John Adam 1721 1792 architect Robert Adam 1728 1792 architect and artist James Adam 1732 1794 architect and designer Archibald Alison 1757 1839 essayist David Allan 1744 1796 painter and illustrator James Anderson 1662 1728 lawyer antiquary and historian James Anderson 1739 1808 agronomist lawyer John Arbuthnot 1667 1735 physician satirist and polymath John Armstrong 1709 1779 physician poet and satirist Joanna Baillie 1762 1851 poet and dramatist George Husband Baird 1761 1840 minister educational reformer and linguist James Beattie 1735 1803 philosopher and poet Andrew Bell 1753 1832 priest and educationalist Sir Charles Bell 1774 1842 surgeon physiologist and neurologist Henry Bell 1767 1830 engineer John Bell of Antermony 1691 1780 doctor and traveller Joseph Black 1728 1799 physicist and chemist first to isolate carbon dioxide Thomas Blackwell 1701 1757 classical scholar and historian William Blackwood 1776 1834 publisher founder of Blackwood s Edinburgh Magazine Hugh Blair 1718 1800 minister author Sir Gilbert Blane of Blanefield 1st Baronet 1749 1834 physician James Boswell 1740 1795 lawyer author of Life of Johnson John Broadwood 1732 1812 piano manufacturer Henry Peter Brougham 1st Baron Brougham and Vaux 1778 1868 Englishman born educated and active in Edinburgh advocate journalist and statesman Robert Brown 1773 1858 botanist Thomas Brown 1778 1820 philosopher James Bruce of Kinnaird 1730 1794 African explorer James Daniel Yakov Bruce 1669 1735 Moscow born Scot Count of the Russian Empire statesman general diplomat and scientist Patrick Brydone 1736 1818 traveller and author David Steuart Erskine 11th Earl of Buchan 1742 1829 founder of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Robert Burns 97 1759 1796 poet John Stuart 3rd Earl of Bute 1713 1792 politician botanist literary and artistic patron first President of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Charles Cameron 1746 1812 architect active in Russia George Campbell 1719 1796 philosopher Thomas Campbell 1777 1844 poet Alexander Carlyle 1722 1805 church leader and autobiographer Thomas Carlyle 1795 1881 historian and philosopher Thomas Chalmers 1780 1847 minister and political economist Sir William Chambers 1723 1796 architect John Cleland 1709 1789 writer author of Fanny Hill Sir John Clerk of Penicuik 2nd Baronet 1676 1755 politician lawyer judge and antiquary Sir John Clerk of Eldin 1728 1812 artist navalist John Clerk Lord Eldin 1757 1832 advocate judge and collector Archibald David Constable 1774 1827 publisher William Cruickshank c 1740 1810 1 chemist James Craig 1739 1795 architect designer of the Edinburgh New Town William Cullen 1710 1790 physician chemist medical researcher David Dale 1739 1806 industrialist merchant and philanthropist Alexander Dalrymple 1737 1808 geographer James Dalrymple 1st Viscount of Stair 1619 1695 lawyer and statesman Sir Alexander Dick 3rd Baronet of Prestonfield 1703 1785 doctor President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Sir Robert Douglas of Glenbervie 6th Baronet 1694 1770 genealogist Alexander Dow 1735 6 1779 writer and Orientalist George Drummond 1688 1766 accountant general and politician Lord Provost of Edinburgh James Elphinston 1721 1809 educator and linguist Robert Erskine doctor 1677 1718 doctor and naturalist head and reformer of Russian medicine compiled first herbarium in Russia and discovered mineral waters Henry Erskine 1746 1817 advocate and politician Henry Farquharson c 1675 1739 mathematician active in Russia where he introduced Arabic numerals and logarithms Adam Ferguson 1723 1816 considered the founder of sociology James Ferguson 1710 1776 astronomer and instrument maker Robert Fergusson 1750 1774 poet Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun 1653 1716 forerunner of the Scottish Enlightenment 98 writer patriot commissioner of Parliament of Scotland George Fordyce 1736 1802 physician and chemist Andrew Foulis 1712 1775 printer Robert Foulis 1707 1776 printer and publisher John Galt 1779 1839 novelist Alexander Gerard 1728 1795 minister academic and philosophical writer James Gillray 1756 1815 caricaturist and printmaker Walter Goodall 1706 1766 historical writer Alexander Gordon of Auchintoul 1669 70 1752 general and memoirist Alexander Gordon 1692 1755 antiquary and singer Thomas Gordon writer c 1691 1750 writer and translator from Latin Thomas Gordon 1714 1797 philosopher mathematician and antiquarian John Gregory 1724 1773 physician medical writer and moralist John Grieve 1753 1805 physician Matthew Guthrie 1743 1807 physician mineralogist and traveller Sir David Dalrymple Lord Hailes 1726 1792 advocate judge and historian Sir James Hall 4th Baronet 1761 1832 geologist geophysicist Alexander Hamilton 1739 1802 physician Gavin Hamilton 1723 1798 painter and archaeologist Sir William Hamilton 1730 1803 diplomat antiquarian archaeologist and vulcanologist Matthew Hardie 1755 1826 violin maker called the Scottish Stradivari James Hogg 1770 1835 writer author of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner Francis Home 1719 1813 physician John Home 1722 1808 minister and writer author of Douglas John Hope 1725 1786 physician and botanist Francis Horner 1778 1817 politician lawyer and political economist John Hunter 1728 1793 surgeon William Hunter 1718 1783 anatomist physician David Hume 1711 1776 philosopher historian and essayist Francis Hutcheson 1694 1746 philosopher James Hutton 69 97 1726 1797 founder of modern geology John Jamieson 1759 1838 minister philologist and antiquary Robert Jameson 1774 1854 Scottish naturalist and mineralogist Francis Jeffrey Lord Jeffrey 1773 1850 advocate journalist and literary critic founder of the Edinburgh Review Henry Home Lord Kames 1696 1782 philosopher judge historian and agricultural improver John Kay 1742 1826 caricaturist and engraver James Keir 1735 1820 chemist geologist industrialist and inventor Thomas Alexander Erskine 6th Earl of Kellie 1732 1781 composer and virtuoso violinist John Law of Lauriston 1671 1729 economist banker active in France Sir John Leslie 1766 1832 mathematician physicist James Lind 1716 1794 doctor pioneer of naval hygiene James Lind 1736 1812 naturalist and physician Charles Lyell botanist 1767 1849 botanist and translator of Dante John Loudon MacAdam 1756 1836 engineer and road builder Zachary Macaulay 1768 1838 statistician abolitionist Colin Macfarquhar 1745 1793 printer co founder of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Sir Alexander Mackenzie 1764 1820 explorer of North America Henry Mackenzie 1745 1831 lawyer and writer Charles Mackie 1688 1770 first Professor of History at Edinburgh University and in the British Isles Sir James Mackintosh 1765 1832 jurist politician and historian Charles Macintosh 1766 1843 chemist inventor of waterproof fabrics Colin Maclaurin 1698 1746 mathematician James Macpherson 1736 1796 writer author of Ossian David Mallet Malloch c 1705 1765 writer Francis Masson 1741 1805 botanist William Murray 1st Earl of Mansfield 1705 1793 jurist judge and politician Henry Dundas 1st Viscount Melville 1742 1811 advocate and statesman Andrew Meikle 1719 1811 engineer and inventor Adam Menelaws 1749 56 1831 architect active in Russia James Mill 1773 1836 philosopher Andrew Millar 1705 1768 publisher John Millar 1735 1801 philosopher historian James Burnett Lord Monboddo 1714 1799 judge founder of modern comparative historical linguistics Alexander Monro I 1697 1767 physician founder of Edinburgh Medical School Alexander Monro II of Craiglockhart and Cockburn 1733 1817 anatomist physician John Monro of Auchinbowie 1725 1789 advocate Jacob More 1740 1793 painter James Douglas 14th Earl of Morton 1702 1768 astronomer patron of science President of the Philosophical Society of Edinburgh and of the Royal Society James Mounsey 1709 10 1773 physician and naturalist Thomas Muir of Huntershill 1765 1799 political reformer William Murdoch 1754 1839 engineer and inventor Alexander Murray 1775 1813 minister and philologist John Murray 1778 1843 publisher Carolina Nairne Lady Nairne nee Oliphant 1766 1845 writer and song collector William Napier c 1741 1812 musician and music publisher William Nicholson 1782 1849 poet Alexander Nisbet 1657 1725 lawyer antiquarian and heraldist William Ogilvie of Pittensear 1736 1819 classicist numismatist and land reformer James Oswald 1710 1769 composer cellist and music publisher Mungo Park 1771 1806 explorer of West Africa Thomas Pennant Welsh naturalist traveller writer and antiquarian 1726 1798 whose travel writings and collected pictorial representations of Scotland inspired the petit grand tour fueling philosophical and artistic re interpretation of landscape appreciation in Scotland John Pinkerton 1758 1826 antiquarian cartographer and historian Archibald Pitcairne 1652 1713 physician and bibliophile John Playfair 1748 1819 mathematician geologist James Playfair 1755 1794 architect William Playfair 1759 1823 engineer political economist founder of graphical methods of statistics Jane Porter 1776 1850 historical novelist Sir Robert Ker Porter 1777 1842 artist author diplomat and traveller Sir John Pringle 1st Baronet 1707 1782 physician Allan Ramsay 99 1686 1758 poet Allan Ramsay 1713 1784 portrait painter Andrew Michael Ramsay 1686 1743 writer based in France Henry Raeburn 58 1756 1823 portrait painter Thomas Reid 1710 1796 philosopher founder of the Scottish School of Common Sense John Rennie 1761 1821 civil engineer William Richardson 1743 1814 author and literary scholar William Robertson 1721 1793 historian minister and Principal of the University of Edinburgh John Robison 1739 1805 physicist mathematician and philosopher first General Secretary of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Sir John Ross 1777 1856 Arctic explorer William Roxburgh 1751 1815 surgeon and botanist founding father of Indian botany Thomas Ruddiman 1674 1757 classical scholar Alexander Runciman 1736 1785 painter John Runciman 1744 1768 9 painter John Rutherford 1695 1779 physician Daniel Rutherford 1749 1819 physician chemist and botanist Paul Sandby artist 1731 1809 English Topographical and landscape painter among the first to depict Scotland as a place of landscape appreciation in its natural state influencing Robert Adam and John Clerk of Eldin Sir Walter Scott 1771 1832 novelist poet Sir Robert Sibbald 1641 1722 physician and antiquary Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster 1754 1835 writer statistician William Skirving c 1745 1796 political reformer William Smellie 1740 1795 editor of the first edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica Adam Smith 1723 1790 philosopher and political economist Sydney Smith 1771 1845 English writer co founder of Edinburgh Review Tobias Smollett 1721 1771 writer Mary Somerville 1780 1872 science writer astronomer polymath Dugald Stewart 1753 1828 philosopher James Stirling 1692 1770 mathematician Sir Robert Strange 1721 1792 engraver Gilbert Stuart 1742 1786 journalist and historian William Symington 1764 1831 engineer inventor builder of the first practical steamboat Robert Tannahill 1774 1810 poet James Tassie 1735 1799 gem engraver and modeller Thomas Telford 1757 1834 civil engineer and architect James Thomson 1700 1748 poet author of The Seasons George Thomson 1757 1851 collector and publisher of the music of Scotland Thomas Trotter 1760 1832 physician George Turnbull 1698 1748 theologian philosopher and writer on education William Tytler 1711 1792 lawyer and historian Alexander Fraser Tytler Lord Woodhouselee 1747 1813 advocate judge writer and historian David Ure 1750 1798 Reverend Natural History and History 1st Statistical Account First to represent entrochi for Scotland and appreciate Scottish natural history in any detail in History of Rutherglen amp East Kilbride 1793 Richard Waitt died 1732 painter John Walker naturalist 1731 1803 minister and natural historian James Watt 1736 1819 inventor of a more efficient practical steam engine James Wilson 1742 1798 a Founding Father of the United States signer of United States Declaration of Independence John Witherspoon 1723 1794 a Founding Father of the United States signer of US Declaration of IndependencePlus those who visited and corresponded with Scottish scholars 69 Alexander James Dallas 1759 1817 American statesman Erasmus Darwin 1731 1802 English physician botanist philosopher grandfather of Charles Darwin Semyon Efimovich Desnitsky c 1740 1789 native of Ukraine University of Glasgow graduate Father of Russian jurisprudence Benjamin Franklin 1706 1790 polymath one of the Founding Fathers of the United States 100 Princess Yekaterina Romanovna Vorontsova Dashkova 1743 1810 Director of the Imperial Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg first President of the Russian AcademySee also editAmerican Enlightenment John Amyatt Books in the Famous Scots Series Industrial Revolution in ScotlandReferences edit Eddy Matthew Daniel 2012 Natural History Natural Philosophy and Readership in Stephen Brown and Warren McDougall eds The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland Vol II Enlightenment and Expansion 1707 1800 Edinburgh University of Edinburgh pp 297 309 Mark R M Towsey 2010 Reading the Scottish Enlightenment Books and Their Readers in Provincial Scotland 1750 1820 Alexander Broadie The Scottish Enlightenment 1997 p 10 Michael Lynch ed Oxford Companion to Scottish History 2001 pp 133 37 R H Campbell The Anglo Scottish Union of 1707 II The Economic Consequences Economic History Review vol 16 April 1964 J D Mackie B Lenman and G Parker A History of Scotland London Penguin 1991 ISBN 0140136495 pp 288 91 J D Mackie B Lenman and G Parker A History of Scotland London Penguin 1991 ISBN 0140136495 p 292 J D Mackie B Lenman and G Parker A History of Scotland London Penguin 1991 ISBN 0140136495 p 296 J D Mackie B Lenman and G Parker A History of Scotland London Penguin 1991 ISBN 0140136495 p 297 P J Bawcutt and J H Williams A Companion to Medieval Scottish Poetry Woodbridge Brewer 2006 ISBN 1 84384 096 0 pp 29 30 School education prior to 1873 Scottish Archive Network 2010 Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 a b c d R Anderson The history of Scottish Education pre 1980 in T G K Bryce and W M Humes eds Scottish Education Post Devolution Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2nd ed 2003 ISBN 0 7486 1625 X pp 219 28 T M Devine The Scottish Nation 1700 2000 London Penguin Books 2001 ISBN 0 14 100234 4 pp 91 100 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2013 The Shape of Knowledge Children and the Visual Culture of Literacy and Numeracy Science in Context 26 2 215 45 doi 10 1017 s0269889713000045 S2CID 147123263 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2016 The Child Writer Graphic Literacy and the Scottish Educational System 1700 1820 History of Education 45 6 695 718 doi 10 1080 0046760x 2016 1197971 S2CID 151785513 T M Devine The rise and fall of the Scottish Enlightenment in T M Devine and J Wormald The Oxford Handbook of Modern Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 0 19 162433 0 p 373 Eddy M D Useful Pictures Joseph Black and the Graphic Culture of Experimentation In Robert G W Anderson Ed Cradle of Chemistry The Early Years of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh Edinburgh John Donald 2015 99 118 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2008 The Language of Mineralogy John Walker Chemistry and the Edinburgh Medical School 1750 1800 Ashgate Retrieved 2014 05 09 R A Houston Scottish Literacy and the Scottish Identity Illiteracy and Society in Scotland and Northern England 1600 1800 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 89088 8 p 245 a b A Herman How the Scots Invented the Modern World London Crown Publishing Group 2001 ISBN 0 609 80999 7 D Vallier Rousseau New York Crown c1979 Mark R M Towsey Reading the Scottish Enlightenment Books and Their Readers in Provincial Scotland 1750 1820 2010 R B Sher Scotland Transformed The Eighteenth Century in J Wormald ed Scotland A History Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 169 M Lynch Scotland A New History London Pimlico 1992 ISBN 0712698930 p 346 Wood John Cunningham ed 1993 Adam Smith Critical Assessments vol 1 Repr ed London Routledge p 95 ISBN 9780415108942 M MacDonald Scottish Art London Thames and Hudson 2000 ISBN 0500203334 p 57 M Lynch Scotland A New History London Pimlico 1992 ISBN 0712698930 p 348 Israel Jonathan 2011 Democratic Enlightenment Philosophy Revolution and Human Rights 1750 1790 Oxford UP p 233 ISBN 9780191620041 Retrieved 2014 05 09 R A Houston and W W J Knox The New Penguin History of Scotland London Penguin 2001 p 342 Fitzpatrick Martin Macleod Emma Page Anthony 2020 The Wodrow Kenrick Correspondence 1750 1810 Volume I 1750 1783 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 291 92 ISBN 9780198809012 a b c R Mitchison Lordship to Patronage Scotland 1603 1745 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1983 ISBN 074860233X p 150 A Broadie A History of Scottish Philosophy Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2009 ISBN 0748616276 p 120 B Freydberg David Hume Platonic Philosopher Continental Ancestor Suny Press 2012 ISBN 1438442157 p 105 G Graham Scottish Philosophy Selected Readings 1690 1960 Imprint Academic 2004 ISBN 0907845746 p 165 R Emerson The contexts of the Scottish Enlightenment in A Broadie ed The Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 00323 0 p 21 E J Wilson P H Reill Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment Infobase Publishing 2nd ed 2004 ISBN 0816053359 pp 499 501 Paul C Gutjahr Charles Hodge Guardian of American Orthodoxy Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 0199740429 p 39 E J Wilson and P H Reill Encyclopedia Of The Enlightenment Infobase 2nd ed 2004 ISBN 0816053359 p 68 J Buchan Crowded with Genius London Harper Collins 2003 ISBN 0 06 055888 1 p 311 J Friday ed Art and Enlightenment Scottish Aesthetics in the Eighteenth Century Imprint Academic 2004 ISBN 0907845762 p 124 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2011 The Line of Reason Hugh Blair Spatiality and the Progressive Structure of Language Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 65 9 24 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2010 0098 S2CID 190700715 G A Kennedy Classical Rhetoric and Its Christian and Secular Tradition Form Ancient to Modern Times University of North Carolina Press 1999 ISBN 0807861138 p 282 J Buchan Crowded with Genius London Harper Collins 2003 ISBN 0 06 055888 1 p 163 D Thomson The Gaelic Sources of Macpherson s Ossian Aberdeen Oliver amp Boyd 1952 G Carruthers Scottish Literature Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2009 ISBN 074863309X pp 53 54 L McIlvanney Spring 2005 Hugh Blair Robert Burns and the Invention of Scottish Literature Eighteenth Century Life 29 2 25 46 doi 10 1215 00982601 29 2 25 S2CID 144358210 Robert Burns Literary Style Archived 2013 10 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 24 September 2010 Samuelson Paul 1976 Economics McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 054590 1 Fry Michael 1992 Adam Smith s Legacy His Place in the Development of Modern Economics Paul Samuelson Lawrence Klein Franco Modigliani James M Buchanan Maurice Allais Theodore Schultz Richard Stone James Tobin Wassily Leontief Jan Tinbergen Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 06164 3 Deardorff Alan V 2006 Glossary of International Economics Division of labor Stigler George J 1951 The Division of Labor Is Limited by the Extent of the Market Journal of Political Economy 59 3 pp 185 93 Samuelson Paul A and William D Nordhaus 2004 Economics 18th ed McGraw Hill ch 2 Markets and Government in a Modern Economy The Invisible Hand p 30 Capital in Smith s usage includes fixed capital and circulating capital The latter includes wages and labour maintenance money and inputs from land mines and fisheries associated with production per The Wealth of Nations Bk II ch 1 2 and 5 Smith Adam 1776 The Wealth of Nations Bk IV Of Systems of political Œconomy ch II Of Restraints upon the Importation from Foreign Countries of such Goods as can be Produced at Home para 3 5 and 8 9 Smith Adam 1776 The Wealth of Nations Bk I IV and Bk I ch 1 para 10 Smith Adam 1776 The Wealth of Nations Bk IV ch 8 para 49 Samuelson Paul A and William D Nordhaus 2004 Economics 18th ed McGraw Hill ch 2 Markets and Government in a Modern Economy The Invisible Hand p 30 Blaug Mark 2008 invisible hand The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd ed v 4 pp 564 66 Abstract a b c Magnus Magnusson 10 November 2003 Northern lights New Statesman Review of James Buchan s Capital of the Mind Edinburgh Crowded With Genius Edinburgh s Moment of the Mind in the United States London John Murray ISBN 0 7195 5446 2 Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2011 The Line of Reason Hugh Blair Spatiality and the Progressive Structure of Language Notes and Records of the Royal Society 65 9 24 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2010 0098 S2CID 190700715 Alan Swingewood Origins of Sociology the Case of the Scottish Enlightenment The British Journal of Sociology Vol 21 No 2 June 1970 pp 164 80 in JSTOR C Hobbs Rhetoric on the Margins of Modernity Vico Condillac Monboddo SIU Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 8093 2469 9 P J Bowler Evolution the History of an Idea Berkeley CA University of California Press 1989 ISBN 978 0 520 06386 0 p 51 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2010 The Sparkling Nectar of Spas The Medical and Commercial Relevance of Mineral Water in Ursula Klein and Emma Spary eds Materials and Expertise in Early Modern Europe Between Market and Laboratory Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 198 226 Herman Arthur 2001 How the Scots Invented the Modern World The true story of how western europe s poorest nation created our world and everything in it Three Rivers Press pp 321 322 ISBN 0 609 80999 7 N Chambers ed The Letters of Sir Joseph Banks A Selection 1768 1820 World Scientific 2000 ISBN 1860942040 p 376 R Mitchelson A History of Scotland London Routledge 2002 0203412710 p 352 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2014 How to See a Diagram A Visual Anthropology of Chemical Affinity Osiris 29 178 96 doi 10 1086 678093 PMID 26103754 S2CID 20432223 David Denby 11 October 2004 Northern Lights How modern life emerged from eighteenth century Edinburgh The New Yorker Review of James Buchan s Crowded With Genius Edinburgh s Moment of the Mind Capital of the Mind Edinburgh in the UK HarperCollins 2003 Hardcover ISBN 0 06 055888 1 ISBN 978 0 06 055888 8 a b c Repcheck Jack 2003 Chapter 7 The Athens of the North The Man Who Found Time James Hutton and the Discovery of the Earth s Antiquity Cambridge Massachusetts Basic Books Perseus Books Group pp 117 43 ISBN 0 7382 0692 X https archive org details NHM104643 Playfair John 1802 Illustration of the Huttonian Theory Edinburgh Cadell amp Davies at archive org Life of Rev David Ure 1865 History of Rutherglen and East Kilbride 1793 David Ure Bynum W F Porter Roy 2002 William Hunter and the Eighteenth Century Medical World Cambridge University Press pp 142 43 ISBN 9780521525176 Ian Brown 2007 The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Enlightenment Britain and Empire 1707 1918 Edinburgh U P pp 199 200 ISBN 9780748624812 June C Ottenberg Musical Currents of the Scottish Enlightenment International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music Vol 9 No 1 June 1978 pp 99 109 in JSTOR Adam Silver HMSO Victoria amp Albert Museum London 1953 p 1 N Pevsner An Outline of European Architecture Harmondsworth Penguin Books 2nd ed 1951 p 237 M Glendinning R MacInnes and A MacKechnie A History of Scottish Architecture from the Renaissance to the Present Day Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 7486 0849 2 p 106 J Harris and M Snodin Sir William Chambers Architect to George III New Haven CT Yale University Press 1996 ISBN 0 300 06940 5 p 11 D Watkin The Architect King George III and the Culture of the Enlightenment Royal Collection Publications 2004 p 15 P Rogers The Eighteenth Century London Taylor and Francis 1978 ISBN 0 416 56190 X p 217 M MacDonald Scottish Art London Thames and Hudson 2000 ISBN 0500203334 p 56 Allan Ramsey Encyclopaedia Britannica retrieved 7 May 2012 Gavin Hamilton Encyclopaedia Britannica retrieved 7 May 2012 M MacDonald Scottish Art London Thames and Hudson 2000 ISBN 0500203334 pp 63 65 E G Breslaw Doctor Alexander Hamilton and Provincial America Louisiana State University Press 2008 ISBN 0807132780 p 41 J R Baxter Culture Enlightenment 1660 1843 music in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 pp 140 41 N Wilson Edinburgh Lonely Planet 3rd ed 2004 ISBN 1740593820 p 33 M Gelbart The Invention of Folk Music and Art Music Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 1139466089 p 30 E Wills Scottish Firsts a Celebration of Innovation and Achievement Edinburgh Mainstream 2002 ISBN 1 84018 611 9 Daniel Walker Howe Why the Scottish Enlightenment Was Useful to the Framers of the American Constitution Comparative Studies in Society and History Vol 31 No 3 July 1989 pp 572 87 in JSTOR Robert W Galvin America s Founding Secret What the Scottish Enlightenment Taught Our Founding Fathers Rowman amp Littlefield 2002 Michael Fry How the Scots Made America Thomas Dunne Books 2004 Sydney E Ahlstrom The Scottish Philosophy and American Theology Church History Vol 24 No 3 Sept 1955 pp 257 72 in JSTOR Stewart John 2020 Chemistry and slavery in the Scottish Enlightenment Annals of Science 77 2 155 168 doi 10 1080 00033790 2020 1738747 PMID 32419638 Colin Donati ed Robert McLellan Playing Scotland s Story Collected Dramatic Works Edinburgh Luath Press 2013 ISBN 9781906817534 See also the various essays included in the volume a b Phillip Manning 28 December 2003 A Toast To Times Past Chapel Hill News Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Cambridge University Press Andrew Fletcher Political Works Dr David Allan A Hotbed of Genius Culture and Society in the Scottish Enlightenment University of St Andrews Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Atiyah Michael 2006 Benjamin Franklin and the Edinburgh Enlightenment Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 150 3 591 606 Further reading editAllan David Virtue Learning and the Scottish Enlightenment Ideas of Scholarship in Early Modern History Edinburgh University Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 7486 0438 8 Amrozowicz Michael C Scottish Enlightenment Histories of Social Organization Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture Vol 48 2019 pp 161 186 10 1353 sec 2019 0011 Berry C J Social Theory Of The Scottish Enlightenment Edinburgh University Press 1997 ISBN 0 7486 0864 8 Broadie Alexander The Scottish Enlightenment The Historical Age of the Historical Nation Birlinn 2002 Paperback ISBN 1 84158 151 8 ISBN 978 1 84158 151 4 Broadie Alexander ed The Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment Cambridge Companions to Philosophy Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 00323 0 Bruce Duncan A The Mark of the Scots Their Astonishing Contributions to History Science Democracy Literature and the Arts 1996 Hardcover ISBN 1 55972 356 4 ISBN 978 1 55972 356 5 Citadel Kensington Books 2000 Paperback ISBN 0 8065 2060 4 ISBN 978 0 8065 2060 5 Buchan James Crowded With Genius Edinburgh s Moment of the Mind Harper Perennial 2004 ISBN 978 0 06 055889 5 Campbell R H and Andrew S Skinner eds The Origins and Nature of the Scottish Enlightenment 1982 12 essays by scholars esp on history of science Daiches David Peter Jones and Jean Jones A Hotbed of Genius The Scottish Enlightenment 1730 1790 1986 170 pp well illustrated introduction Derry J F Darwin in Scotland Edinburgh Evolution and Enlightenment Whittles Publishing 2009 Paperback ISBN 1 904445 57 8 Daiches David Peter Jones Jean Jones eds A Hotbed of Genius The Scottish Enlightenment 1731 1790 Edinburgh University Press 1986 ISBN 0 85411 069 0 Dunyach Jean Francois and Ann Thomson eds The Enlightenment in Scotland national and international perspectives 2015 Eddy Matthew Daniel The Language of Mineralogy John Walker Chemistry and the Edinburgh Medical School 1750 1800 2008 Goldie Mark The Scottish Catholic Enlightenment The Journal of British Studies Vol 30 No 1 Jan 1991 pp 20 62 in JSTOR Graham Gordon Morality and Feeling in the Scottish Enlightenment Philosophy Vol 76 No 296 Apr 2001 pp 271 82 in JSTOR Herman Arthur How the Scots Invented the Modern World The True Story of How Western Europe s Poorest Nation Created Our World amp Everything in It Crown Publishing Group 2001 ISBN 0 609 80999 7 Hook Andrew ed The History of Scottish Literature Vol 2 1660 1800 Aberdeen 1987 Israel Jonathan Scottish Enlightenment and Man s Progress ch 9 in Democratic Enlightenment Philosophy Revolution and Human Rights 1750 1790 2011 pp 233 69 excerpt and text search Lenman Bruce P Enlightenment and Change Scotland 1746 1832 2nd ed The New History of Scotland Series Edinburgh University Press 2009 280 pp ISBN 978 0 7486 2515 4 1st edition also published under the titles Integration Enlightenment and Industrialization Scotland 1746 1832 1981 and Integration and Enlightenment Scotland 1746 1832 1992 general survey Scott Paul H ed Scotland A Concise Cultural History Edinburgh 1993 Swingewood Alan Origins of Sociology The Case of the Scottish Enlightenment The British Journal of Sociology Vol 21 No 2 June 1970 pp 164 80 in JSTOR Towsey Mark R M Reading the Scottish Enlightenment Books and Their Readers in Provincial Scotland 1750 1820 2010 Primary sources edit Broadie Alexander ed The Scottish Enlightenment An Anthology 1998 primary sources excerpt and text searchExternal links editNorthern Lights How modern life emerged from eighteenth century Edinburgh Scottish Enlightenment an introduction archived 26 October 2004 Living philosophy Philosophical play readings of the legacy of David Hume Adam Smith and Robert Burns Edinburgh Old Town Association has references and links The Enlightenment in Scotland BBC Radio 4 discussion with Tom Devine Karen O Brien and Alexander Broadie In Our Time Dec 5 2002 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scottish Enlightenment amp oldid 1191901445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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