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Chips from a German Workshop, Volume 5: Miscellaneous Later Essays
by F. Max (Friedrich Max) Müller
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 277 KB
Description
F. Max Müller’s collection of essays from the late 19th century presents a range of philosophical and cultural topics, with a particular focus on notions of freedom, mythology, and comparative theology. The volume begins with a presidential address in which Müller reflects on individual liberty, referencing John Stuart Mill’s "On Liberty" and discussing societal attitudes toward personal rights. Throughout, Müller examines the development of ideas concerning societal authority and personal freedom, engaging with contemporary intellectual currents and debates of his time.
The essays illustrate Müller's scholarly approach, combining philosophical analysis with cultural commentary. The work situates these discussions within the broader context of late Victorian thought, highlighting the influence of European intellectual movements. As a collection, it provides insight into the theoretical discussions that shaped ideas of liberty, tradition, and religion during the period.
The essays illustrate Müller's scholarly approach, combining philosophical analysis with cultural commentary. The work situates these discussions within the broader context of late Victorian thought, highlighting the influence of European intellectual movements. As a collection, it provides insight into the theoretical discussions that shaped ideas of liberty, tradition, and religion during the period.
From the opening pages
the arch-enemy of the rights of individuality, is represented like an evil spirit, whom it behooves every true man to resist with might and main, and whose demands, as they cannot be altogether ignored, must be reduced at all hazards to the lowest level. I doubt whether any of the principles for which Mill pleaded so warmly and strenuously in his Essay “On Liberty” would at the present day be challenged or resisted, even by the most illiberal of philosophers, or the most conservative of politicians. Mill's demands sound very humble to our ears. They amount to no more than this, “that the individual is not accountable to society for his actions so far as they concern the interests of no person but himself, and that he may be subjected to social or legal punishments for such actions only as are prejudicial to the interests of others.” Is there any one here present who doubts the justice of that principle, or who would wish to reduce the freedom of the individual to a smaller measure? Whatever social tyranny may have existed twenty years ago, when it wrung that fiery protest from the lips of John Stuart Mill, can we imagine a state of society, not totally Utopian, in which the individual man need be less ashamed of his social fetters, in which he could more freely utter all his honest convictions, more boldly propound all his theories, more [pg 003] fearlessly agitate for their speedy realization; in which, in fact, each man can be so entirely himself as the society of England, such as it now is, such as generations of hard-thinking and hard-working Englishmen have made it, and left it as the most sacred inheritance to their sons and daughters? Look through the whole of history, not excepting the brightest days of republican freedom at Athens and Rome, and you will not find one single period in which the measure of liberty accorded to each individual was larger than it is at present, at least in England. And if you wish to realize the full blessings of the time in which we live, compare Mill's plea for Liberty with another written not much more than two hundred years ago, and by a thinker not inferior either in power or boldness to Mill himself. According to Hobbes, the only freedom which an individual in his ideal state has a right…
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