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THE PHILLIPSONIAN ENLIGHTENMENT
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2014
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A founding editor of Modern Intellectual History (MIH), an acclaimed biographer of Adam Smith and a prolific essayist on all aspects of the Scottish Enlightenment, from its origins to its aftermath, Nicholas Phillipson needs little introduction to the readers of this journal. However, Phillipson's recent retirement from his editorial duties on MIH provides a suitable moment to celebrate one of the pioneers in our field. When the current editors set out to commission a historiographical overview of Phillipson's oeuvre and career, I was honoured to be asked and delighted to accept.
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References
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21 There were, of course, other influences, not least the social fact of being simultaneously welcome insider and keenly observant outsider in Scottish life. Although English by background, Phillipson had been largely educated in Aberdeen, at Aberdeen Grammar School and then Aberdeen University, before going to Cambridge. Phillipson's father, Andrew Phillipson (1910–77), an eminent veterinary physiologist and leading authority on ruminants, had been appointed from Cambridge to head the Department of Physiology at the Rowett Research Institute at Aberdeen. For the ODNB article on Andrew Phillipson, see www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/31545. Phillipson's first undergraduate degree at Aberdeen (1954–8) was in history and politics; here he came under the influence of a pioneering figure in the study of political and legal thought, the late J. H. “Jimmy” Burns (1921–2012). Phillipson also had a further period as an undergraduate at St Catharine's College, Cambridge (1958–60), and undertook National Service in the Royal Air Force (1960–62) flying Chipmunks—akin, perhaps, to Gibbon's time in the Hampshire militia—before embarking on doctoral research.
22 Phillipson, “Definition”, 125.
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25 Phillipson, “Definition”, 145.
26 Phillipson, “Culture and Society”, 416.
27 Ibid., 417.
28 Ibid., 437.
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30 Phillipson, “Culture and Society”, 437.
31 Phillipson, “Hume as Moralist”, 140.
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35 Phillipson, “Culture and Society”, 448.
36 Ibid., 442.
37 Ibid., 448.
38 Ibid., 432.
39 Phillipson, “Beattie”, 147.
40 Phillipson, “Culture and Society”, 443.
41 Phillipson, “Beattie”, 148.
42 Phillipson, “Defintion”, 142.
43 Ibid., 136.
44 Phillipson, “Beattie”, 148.
45 Phillipson, “Pursuit of Virtue”, 97.
46 Ibid., 99.
47 See esp. Phillipson, “The Export of Enlightenment”, Times Literary Supplement, 2 July 1976, 823–4.
48 Phillpson, “Definition”, 147.
49 Phillipson, “Culture and Society”, 424.
50 Phillipson, “Politeness and Politics”; Phillipson, “Providence and Progress: An Introduction to the Historical Thought of Robertson, William”, in Brown, S. J., ed., William Robertson and the Expansion of Empire (Cambridge, 1997), 55–73Google Scholar.
51 See also Phillipson, , “Scott as Story-Teller: An Essay in Psychobiography”, in Bell, A. S., ed., Scott Bicentenary Essays (Edinburgh and London, 1973), 87–100Google Scholar.
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57 For a fuller review see C. Kidd, “Maiden Aunt’, London Review of Books, 7 Oct. 2010.
58 Cf. Phillipson, “Politics, Politeness and Anglicisation”, 226.
59 Davie, G. E., The Democratic Intellect (Edinburgh, 1981; first published 1961)Google Scholar.
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