Auguste Comte and Positivism

Auguste Comte and Positivism

by John Stuart Mill

12 chapters5h 47mEnglish1865

About this book

Part 1 lays out the framework for Positivism as originated in France by Auguste Comte in his Cours de Philosophie Positive. Mill examines the tenets of Comte's movement and alerts us to defects. Part 2 concerns all Comte's writings except the Cours de Philosophie Positive. During Comte's later years he gave up reading newspapers and periodicals to keep his mind pure for higher study. He also became enamored of a certain woman who changed his view of life. Comte turned his philosophy into a religion, with morality the supreme guide. Mill finds that Comte learned to despise science and the intellect, instead substituting his frantic need for the regulation of change. (Summary by Bill Boerst)

Chapters (12)

101 - Part 1A
2086
202 - Part 1B
2004
303 - Part 1C
2563
404 - Part 1D
1595
505 - Part 1E
1763
606 - Part 1F
1760
707 - Part 1G
1162
808 - Part 2A
1604
909 - Part 2B
1586
1010 - Part 2C
1759
1111 - Part 2D
1222
1212 - Part 2E
1728

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