Paperback / softback
July 15, 2014
9780813151809
English
226
Illus
9.00 Inches (US)
6.00 Inches (US)
.77 Pounds (US)
$25.00 USD, £21.50 GBP
v2.1 Reference
Electronic book text
October 21, 2021
9780813185972
9780813151809
English
226
Illus
9.00 Inches (US)
6.00 Inches (US)
$45.00 USD
v2.1 Reference

Torchbearer of Freedom

The Influence of Richard Price on 18th Century Thought

A bronze inscription in the public library of Bridgend calls Richard Price "Philosopher. Preacher. Actuary. Cfaill Dynolryw" [Friend of Humanity]. He was all these and something more. Son of a Welsh Presbyterian of Calvinistic leaning, Richard Price was educated for the ministry. That he belonged in the best of Dissenting tradition was exhibited at an early age in his own interest in Arianism, an interest fostered by the academy at Pentwyn where he studied. Here he met the works of Samuel Clarke, which thoroughly aroused the ire of his father.

Richard Price did not cringe in the face of hostile public opinion when events temporarily brought his principles into unpopularity. More than most of his liberal contemporaries, he was truly a "torchbearer of freedom." His first book was an attack on the empiricism of Locke, however, Richard Price intended no denial of other aspects of Locke's thought. An abiding faith in human reason, in free will, and in the value of education and science, with the consequent distrust of tyranny of any variety, all show that Price was not in revolt against the leading philosophical trends of his age. Rather he sought to place these values on a firm moral basis.

In association with many of the great spirits of the age, Joseph Priestley, Benjamin Franklin, Adam Smith, John Howard, the Younger Pitt, and Turgot, among others, he moved from moral philosophy to mathematics (an area in which he made many advances in statistics) and from there to political economy. His contribution in this latter respect was twofold. There was his enormous influence in drawing attention to the problem of the national debt of England and suggesting the Sinking Fund scheme that Pitt finally introduced. And there was his interest in and encouragement of the independence of America. In 1778 the Continental Congress voted to invite Price to take up American citizenship and offered to pay his expenses if he chose to move.

The life of Richard Price is an example of the power of the human spirit to shape the course of history.

About the Author

Carl B. Cone is professor of history at the University of Kentucky. He is the author of Burke and The Nature of Politics, volumes I and II, The University of Kentucky: A Pictorial History, and the editor of Hounds in the Morning: Sundry Sports of Merry England.

 

9780813151809 : torchbearer-of-freedom-cone
Paperback / softback
226 Pages
$25.00 USD
9780813185972 : torchbearer-of-freedom-cone
Electronic book text
226 Pages
$45.00 USD

Other Titles by Carl B. Cone

Burke and the Nature of Politics

Carl B. Cone
Oct 2021 - University Press of Kentucky
$35.00 USD - Paperback / softback
$35.00 USD - Paperback / softback
$40.00 USD - Electronic book text

Hounds in the Morning

edited by Carl B. Cone
Oct 2021 - University Press of Kentucky
$25.00 USD - Paperback / softback
$45.00 USD - Electronic book text

The University of Kentucky

Carl B. Cone
Apr 1990 - University Press of Kentucky
$40.00 USD - Hardback

Other Titles in BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Philosophers

The Triumph of Uncertainty

Alfred I. Tauber
Sep 2022 - Central European University Press
$95.00 USD - Hardback
$32.00 USD - Paperback / softback

Royce's Voyage Down Under

Frank M. Oppenheim
Dec 2021 - University Press of Kentucky
$15.00 USD - Paperback / softback
$45.00 USD - Electronic book text

The Politics of Motion

Thomas A. Spragens, Jr., foreword by Antony Flew
Oct 2021 - University Press of Kentucky
$25.00 USD - Paperback / softback
$45.00 USD - Electronic book text