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Frederick Rosen
University College, London
United Kingdom
Vol 18 No 1-2 (2011): International Tribute to Esperanza Guisán (Volume II), Sección Monográfica: Homenaje a Esperanza Guisán 2010-2012 (Parte 2), pages 23-43
Submitted: 26-02-2013 Accepted: 26-02-2013 Published: 26-02-2013
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Abstract

A journey usually has a starting point and a destination. In this brief essay only a portion of this journey can be discussed: that which begins with Mill’s search for a new conception of liberty which he first developed in Principles of Political Economy (1848) and then considered in another context in On Liberty (1859).

Here, we shall confine our attention to the concepts that enabled Mill to make this journey. We shall conclude by considering the question of whether or not Mill should be considered a believer in a socialist ideology.  There is no simple answer to this question.  It will be argued that part of the problem lies less with the kind of socialism that might appeal to Mill and more with Mill’s conception of his role in public life as a logician and philosopher rather than as a public moralist advancing ideological views.

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