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J.S. Mill on Civilization and Barbarism



John Stuart Mill wrote "On Liberty" in 1859 in which he argues that Western society is in danger of coming to a standstill. He believes that this is because of the wanting model of China, which is a once advanced civilization that has apparently ossified. He also believes that imperialism is a part of the civilizing process and that this is why India is important in his argument. more details
Key Features:
  • John Stuart Mill argues that Western society is in danger of coming to a standstill because of the wanting model of China
  • He believes that imperialism is a part of the civilizing process and that this is why India is important
  • He argues that India has the potential to become a model society for the West


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Features
Author Michael Levin
Format Trade paperback
ISBN 9780714684765
Publisher ROUTLEDGE
Manufacturer Frank Cass Publishers
Description
John Stuart Mill wrote "On Liberty" in 1859 in which he argues that Western society is in danger of coming to a standstill. He believes that this is because of the wanting model of China, which is a once advanced civilization that has apparently ossified. He also believes that imperialism is a part of the civilizing process and that this is why India is important in his argument.

John Stuart Mill's best-known work is On Liberty (1859). In it he declared that Western society was in danger of coming to a standstill. This was an extraordinarily pessimistic claim in view of Britain's global dominance at the time and one that has been insufficiently investigated in the secondary literature. The wanting model was that of China, a once advanced civilization that had apparently ossified.

To understand how Mill came to this conclusion requires one to investigate his notion of the stages from barbarism to civilization, and also his belief in imperialism as part of the civilizing process. Here India plays a central role, as both Mill and his father worked for the East India Company. This study, then, investigates the relationship between Mill's liberalism and his justification of imperialism. It takes us into the Utilitarianism of his family background, and such other influences as Romanticism, Scottish political economy and such key French thinkers as Saint-Simon, Guizot, Comte and Tocqueville. Mill, then, provides the focus of a debate on the origins, meaning, and consequences of Western civilization. It encompasses discourses on colonialism and orientalism, on Enlightenment optimism and conservative despair, on the need for leadership and the advance of democracy; in short, on the blessings, curses and dangers of modernization from approximately the time of the American and French revolutions to that of the so-called mid-Victorian calm in which On Liberty was written. Furthermore, current political issues concerning the West and Islamic countries have heightened interest in just the kind of question that this book discusses: that of how the West relates to, and assesses, the rest of the world.
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