John Stuart Mill - one minor mistake
Jeffrey Kaplan
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I am a philosophy professor. These are my video lectures.
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Video Description
I am writing a book! If you to know when it is ready (and maybe win a free copy), submit your email on my website: https://www.jeffreykaplan.org/ I won’t spam you or share your email address with anyone. This is the first in a series of video lectures built for my college course in the philosophy of language. John Stuart Mill lived in England from 1806 to 1873. He was a philosopher and also a Member of Parliament. Much of his philosophical work is in moral and political philosophy. He was the student of Jeremy Bentham and, like Bentham, an advocate of Utilitarianism. He was the second Member of Parliament to argue that women should be granted the right to vote. Mill also wrote one of the early and central works in the philosophy of language, 'Of Names,' which is what we are reading for this course. This video lecture discusses several distinctions among types of names that Mill introduces: General Names vs. Singular Names Collective Names vs. Non-Collective Names Connotative Names vs. Non-Connotative Names But it important to note that Mill's term "names" doesn't just include proper names, like “Susan” or “Frederick” or “Dartmouth” or “North Carolina.” The term also encompasses, for example, definite descriptions, like “the tallest human on Earth,” “the cat,” and “the teacher of Plato.”
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