Ladies of the Leisure Class, The Bourgeoises of Northern France in the Nineteenth Century, by Bonnie G. SmithLadies of the Leisure Class, The Bourgeoises of Northern France in the Nineteenth Century, by Bonnie G. Smith. Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1981. xi, 303 pp. $22.50. $9.95 paperback.

1982 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 366-367
Author(s):  
Patricia E. Prestwich
Author(s):  
R.J. Fechner

John Witherspoon, Scottish-American clergyman, political leader and educator, was born at Gifford, East Lothian, educated at Edinburgh University and ordained Presbyterian minister. In his mid-forties he went to America as president of the College of New Jersey, later Princeton University. He held political office for New Jersey and played a major role in organizing the Presbyterian Church in America and improving the College at Princeton. Witherspoon was representative of eighteenth-century Scottish and American Calvinists who tried to reconcile their orthodox theological doctrines with the Enlightenment’s philosophical currents of empiricism, scepticism, and utilitarianism by harmonizing reason and revelation. Although Witherspoon was a philosophical eclectic, Francis Hutcheson’s moral sense philosophy was the major source of his utilitarian ethics and republican politics. Witherspoon was not an original thinker, but his popularization of Scottish common sense and moral sense philosophy through his forceful personality and effective teaching laid the foundation for its dominance of nineteenth-century American academic philosophy.


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