John Stuart Mill, Awesome Dude
Who among you forum-ites know
this guy? Well, you should. I didn't know much about him until this morning when I read a review of his biography. I think Rym and Scott would agree with me when I say he was ahead of his time. Basically, he sums up many Scrymily beliefs quite succinctly.
Instead of reading the Wikipedia, read the
New Yorker bit. It's interesting.
Comments
Also, Adam Gopnik, the guy who wrote that, is a really cool, down-to-earth literary critic. He also wrote this piece on GK Chesterton that I enjoyed a lot (although Chesterton was nowhere near as right as Mill). I really enjoy getting his take on things.
If we taught this in school, we'd be able to actually harness the thoughts of history, rather than simply cycling through them over and over, pondering the same questions. We might be able to build on great minds, and find the answers. That's a question I've pondered for years. I think we could figure out the answers, given a sufficient amount of information-sharing and dissemination.
Specifically in On Liberty he writes well and clear, but eventually you (the average western reader) live in a society where all his major conclusions were implemented, or drawn upon for an outline of the current laws. this means you probably approve all the major concepts before they're introduced.
The book is no longer thought provoking as it already proved its thesis, and the all the logical steps taken in order to prove it seem now like a debate on semantics (positive liberties versus negative liberties).
I haven't read many of his other writings, but he seems very outdated.
However, if you want to debate it, your argument is akin to saying "Newton wasn't that smart, today everybody knows about calculus." It's a little different when you were the first to come up with the idea. Additionally, On Liberty is a classic, and highly influential on today's society. His ideas formed the basis of many of our laws today. That's the opposite of irrelevant. Furthermore, there are many laws still in effect (at least in the U.S.) that contradict the harm principle. So "all his major conclusions" are not yet implemented in western society. It's still relevant. It's still important.