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Topic: Henry Longueville Mansel


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In the News (Sun 3 Jun 12)

  
  HENRY LONGUEVILLE MANSEL - LoveToKnow Article on HENRY LONGUEVILLE MANSEL   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The philosophy of Mansel, like that of Sir William Hamilton, was mainly due to Aristotle, Kant and Reid.
While denying all knowledge of the superserisuous, Mansel deviated from K'ant in contending that cognition of the ego as it really is is itself a fact of experience.
The latter Mansel's psychology reduces to consciousness of our organism as extended; with the former is given consciousness of free will and moral obligation.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /M/MA/MANSEL_HENRY_LONGUEVILLE.htm   (1294 words)

  
 Henry Longueville Mansel biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Longueville Mansel (October 6, 1820 - July 1, 1871) was an English philosopher.
He was born at Cosgrove, Northamptonshire (where his father, also Henry Longueville Mansel, fourth son of General John Mansel, was rector).
While denying all knowledge of the supersensuous, Mansel deviated from Kant in contending that cognition of the ego as it really is itself a fact of experience.
henry-longueville-mansel.biography.ms   (393 words)

  
 Henry Longueville Mansel -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Longueville Mansel (October 6, 1820 – July 1, 1871) was an (An Indo-European language belonging to the West Germanic branch; the official language of Britain and the United States and most of the Commonwealth countries) English (A specialist in philosophy) philosopher.
While denying all knowledge of the supersensuous, Mansel deviated from Kant in contending that cognition of the ego as it really is belongs among the facts of experience.
A summary of Mansel's philosophy is contained in his article "Metaphysics" in the 5th edition of the (Click link for more info and facts about Encyclopædia Britannica) Encyclopædia Britannica (1860).
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/h/he/henry_longueville_mansel.htm   (573 words)

  
 Systematic Theology - Volume I (iv.iv.iii)
Mansel uses the phrases that of which “we do not and cannot think,” that “which we cannot conceive,” and “that which we are unable to comprehend,” as meaning one and the same thing.
Mansel tells us that it is from consciousness we get our idea of substance, of personality, of cause, of right and wrong, in short of everything which lies at the foundation of knowledge and religion; and therefore if consciousness deceive us we have nothing to depend upon.
Hamilton 362and Mansel therefore teach that the veracity of consciousness is the foundation of all knowledge, and that the denial of that veracity inevitably leads to absolute scepticism.
www.ccel.org /ccel/hodge/theology1.iv.iv.iii.html   (6317 words)

  
 Part 1, Chapter 4, Systematic Theology -- Charles Hodge   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Mansel admits the force of the argument, and says we must renounce all hope of knowing what God is, and be content with "regulative knowledge," which teaches not what God really is, but what He wills us to think Him to be.
Mansel to the cause of truth was to demonstrate the utter futility of this pretended philosophy of the Infinite, on the principles of its advocates.
Hamilton and Mansel therefore teach that the veracity of consciousness is the foundation of all knowledge, and that the denial of that veracity inevitably leads to absolute scepticism.
www.dabar.org /Theology/Hodge/HodgeV1/P1_C04.htm   (11689 words)

  
 MANSFELD, ERNST VON - LoveToKnow Article on MANSFELD, ERNST VON   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
MANSEL, HENRY LONGUEVILLE (1820-1871), English philosopher, was born at Cosgrove, Northamptonshire (where his father, also Henry Longueville Mansel, fourth son of General John Mansel, was rector), on the 6th of October 1820.
He appeared successfully in several plays adapted from well-known stories, and his rendering (1887:) of the doubled title-parts in R. Stevensons Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde created a profound impression.
It was with this play that he made his London reputation during a season (rS88) at the Lyceum theatre, by invitation of Henry Irving.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /M/MA/MANSFELD_ERNST_VON.htm   (2529 words)

  
 Henry Longueville Mansel   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Longueville Mansel (October 6, 1820 – July 1, 1871) was an English philosopher.
These lectures led Mansel to a bitter controversy with the Christian socialist theologian Frederick Maurice.
A summary of Mansel's philosophy is contained in his article "Metaphysics" in the 5th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1860).
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/H/Henry-Longueville-Mansel.htm   (471 words)

  
 Henry Litton - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Henry Litton   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Litton - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Henry Litton.
Born Henry Denis Litton into a multiracial family in Hong Kong, Litton excelled in school during his early years in England and was educated in King's College, Taunton and Merton College, Oxford, where he graduated with honors in jurisprudence.
After passing the Bar exam in 1959, Litton entered into private practice in Hong Kong where he was eminently successful as a trial lawyer.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Henry-Litton.html   (309 words)

  
 Henry Longueville Mansel --  Encyclopædia Britannica
One of the first great American scientists after Benjamin Franklin, Joseph Henry was responsible for numerous inventions and discovered several major principles of electromagnetism, including the oscillatory nature of electric discharge and self-inductance, an important phenomenon in electronic circuitry.
Fearless and eloquent, Patrick Henry became the spokesman of the Southern colonies during the stirring period that led to the American Revolution.
The Canadian writer Henry Makow gained fame at the age of 11 when he began to write the syndicated advice column “Ask Henry.” The column ran in newspapers in the early 1960s.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9050608   (580 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Henry Longueville Mansel (Philosophy, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Henry Longueville Mansel[man´sul] Pronunciation Key, 1820–71, English philosopher and theologian.
A disciple of Sir William Hamilton, he systematized his teacher's conception of the relativity of knowledge, and in his famous Bampton Lectures, The Limits of Religious Thought Examined (1858), he applied the conception to religion, denying the possibility of any knowledge of the absolute and asserting the necessity of faith.
More articles from AllRefer Reference on Henry Longueville Mansel
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/M/Mansel-H.html   (179 words)

  
 19th century British Philosophy & Psychology
"Henry Thomas Buckle, a fervent admirer of Mill, who had set out to write a History of Civilization had died in 1862 [at the age of 40] with only the introductory volume of his giant undertaking published, leaving only an unsorted mass of relevant material and scribbled fragments.
Yet although Mansel has some claims to be considered as initiating the movement towards an Idealistic logic in...England, the fact remains that Bradley and Bosanquet do not so much as refer to him, contemptuous no doubt of his allegiance to the despised Hamilton...."--Passmore, pp.
Here, as elsewhere, Mansel is the consistent opponent of Mill, and he figures prominently in Mill's Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy (1865), subsequent editions of which include a number of footnotes responding to Mansel's criticisms.
tbrookswilder.com /Britlist.html   (6974 words)

  
 Mansel Family Crest
In continental Europe, the most ancient recorded family crest was discovered upon the monumental effigy of a Count of Wasserburg in the church of St. Emeran, at Ratisobon, Germany...
In the Mansel coat of arms as in all coat of arms the crest is only one element of the full armorial achievement.
Heraldry is defined as the hereditary art or science of blazoning, the description is appropriate technical terms of Coats-of-Arms and other heraldic and armorial insignia, and is of very ancient origin...
www.houseofnames.com /xq/asp.fc/qx/mansel-family-crest.htm   (396 words)

  
 Today in History - July 30
Ordained in 1844, Mansel taught at Oxford from 1859.
In his Bampton Lectures of 1858 Mansel argued that the human intellect acquired knowledge of the nature of God from special revelation alone.
This thesis brought Mansel into a protracted conflict with F. Maurice and John Stuart Mill.
chi.lcms.org /history/tih0730.htm   (1366 words)

  
 Frederick Maurice   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The same happened with the incumbency of St. Peter's, Vere Street, which he held for nine years (1860—1869), becoming the centre of a sympathetic circle.
During the early years of this period he was engaged in a hot and bitter controversy with Henry Longueville Mansel (afterwards dean of St Paul's), arising out of the latter's Bampton lecture on reason and revelation.
During his residence in London, Maurice was identified with two important educational initiatives.
publicliterature.org /en/wikipedia/f/fr/frederick_maurice.html   (1001 words)

  
 See The Tree?
The posit was necessary, for upon it Mansel built his reply to the Bible critics in Germany.
Mansel saw knowledge as limited to the finite, external world and god as outside of it.
Mansel used his arguments of the unknowability of god to defend an ultra-conservative and dogmatic High Anglican Church and its King James Bible.
www.atheists.org /Atheism/seethetree.html   (12681 words)

  
 Mr. Murray's List of New and Recent Publications, July, 1890.
By Sir HENRY LAYARD, G.C.B. With Portrait and Illustrations.
SMITH, D.C.L., and HENRY WACE, D.D. 4 Vols.
HENRY WILLIAM WATKINS, M.A., D.D., Sometime Scholar of Balliol College, Oxford, Fellow of King's College, London, Archdeacon and Canon of Durham, and Professor of Hebrew in the University of Durham.
www.gutenberg.org /files/13688/13688-h/13688-h.htm   (7324 words)

  
 Ephilosopher :: Metaphysics and Epistemology :: Metaphysics   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Longueville Mansel, Metaphysics or the Philosophy of Consciousness,Edinburgh, Adam and Charles Black, 1860.
I made a post earlier on what Metaphysics is, I recommended William Hamiltons Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic, Henry Mansel's Metaphysics or the Philosophy of Consciousness.
If you'd like to read a book written as metaphysics I would suggest Henry Hallett's Aeternitas, you might even include William James' Varieties of Religious Experience.
www.ephilosopher.com /phpBB_14-action-viewtopic-topic-511.html   (2021 words)

  
 H. Orton Wiley: Christian Theology - Chapter 11
The second stage is found in the philosophy of Sir William Hamilton and that of Henry Longueville Mansel.
Dean Mansel of St. Paul's (1820-1871) accepted the philosophy of Hamilton and sought to apply it as an apologetic in theology.
Herbert Spencer as an Evolutionist carried the doctrine of Hamilton and Mansel one step farther, and professed belief in "an Absolute that transcends not only human knowledge, but human conception." He wrote his First Principles of a New System of Philosophy in an attempt to discover a basis for the reconciliation of science and religion.
wesley.nnu.edu /holiness_tradition/wiley/wiley-1-11.htm   (7793 words)

  
 History of Philosophy at Oxford University
and first occupied by Henry Wall (1810-1873), while in the same year Henry Longueville Mansel (1820-1871) was appointed in as the first Waynflete Professor of Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy.
Yet this was a slow change, and College tuition remained the norm for some considerable time, an effective system of university-wide lectures only really beginning to take shape in the 1870’s.
The post was taken over in 1849 by Henry Wall, and in 1859 it was converted into a Professorship.
www.philosophy.ox.ac.uk /history/index.shtml   (2113 words)

  
 Penguin Classics: Features
Behind the closed doors of undistinguished British households, the genre suggested, all manner of criminality, misery and insanity might be concealed.
Accounts of sensation fiction have tended to dwell on these acts of censure as much as the novels themselves, recycling the same disapproving comments by writers such as Oliphant and Henry Longueville Mansel, a clergyman who castigated Collins and Braddon for ‘preaching to the nerves’.
The pleasure of sensation narrative was queasy and neurotic, but it was one that was pursued by large numbers of Victorian readers who probably regarded the health warnings of such reviewers as part of the fun.
www.penguin.co.nz /nf/shared/WebDisplay/0,,213894_1_0,00.html   (2465 words)

  
 George Peabody (1795-1869) : Saturday, July 09, 2005 - Posts   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Peabody shares with ex-Gov. [Henry Alexander] Wise [1806-76] the uppermost cottage in Baltimore Row, and sits at the same table with General Lee, Mr.
of State William Henry Seward's truculence toward Britain contributed to U.S.-British difficulties and was worrisome to GP.
The honorary degree ceremony was held in the Sheldonian Theater.
free-blog-site.com /bfparker/archive/2005/07/09.aspx   (3896 words)

  
 List 1423: Scotch Enlightenment   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Edited by Henry Longueville Mansel (1820-1871) & John Veitch (1829-1894).
The Philosophy of Common Sense in an Age of Revolution.
An elaborate survey of Hamiltonian Intuitionism, Mill's book provoked much controversy, especially with Hamilton's disciple Mansel.
www.gach.com /Gach/l1423-01.htm   (3533 words)

  
 Bernard Lightman | Division of Humanities | York University
"Henry Longueville Mansel and the Origins of Agnosticism." History of European Ideas 5, No. 1 (1984), 45-64.*
Thomas Henry Huxley: Communicating for Science." Isis 83 (1992), 677-678.
"John Henry Pepper, the Polytechnic, and the Theatre of Victorian Popular Science," History of Science Colloquium, University of Oklahoma, September, 2004.
www.arts.yorku.ca /huma/lightman/publications.html   (2882 words)

  
 BAMPTON, JOHN (c. 169o-1751) - Online Information article about BAMPTON, JOHN (c. 169o-1751)
Goulburn in 185o (The Resurrection of the See also:
Mansel in 1858 (The Limits of Religious Thought); H. See also:
Liddon in 1866 (The Divinity of our Lord); E. See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /BAI_BAR/BAMPTON_JOHN_c_169o_1751_.html   (730 words)

  
 Philosophy: The Nineteenth Century (Surnames A-G)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
translated by Richard Congreve (1818-1899) with appendix translated by H[enry] D[ix] Hutton (1824-1907) and index by Frederic Harrison.
Translated from the French, with an Introduction, Notes, and Additions, by C[aleb] S[prague] Henry (1804-1884), D.D. Fourth Improved Edition, Revised According to the Author's Last Corrections.
Havard, William C. Henry Sidgwick: Later Utilitarian Political Philosophy.
www.gach.com /Gach/l1399-01.htm   (9768 words)

  
 [No title]
By SIR WILLIAM HAM- ILTON, BART., Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Edinburgh.
Edited by the REV. HENRY LONGUEVILLE MANSEL, B. Oxford, and JOHN VEITCH, M. Edinburgh.
FEW subjects are more attractive to the historical student, and few could be rendered more interesting to the general reader, than the annals of the Christian Church.
lcweb2.loc.gov /ndlpcoop/nicmoas/nora/nora0092.sgm   (16554 words)

  
 Classics in the History of Psychology -- Baldwin (1901) Definitions Ma - Md
The point is, that the rational soul, being purely spiritual, cannot confer corporeity upon the human body, but a special form, the form of corporeity, is requisite.
Suarez and others, generally Thomists, as well as Henry of Ghent, denied this on the ground that a species has but one form.
It sprung from the study of the doctrine of transubstantiation.
www.psych.yorku.ca /classics/Baldwin/Dictionary/defs/M1defs.htm   (13377 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Home, later Lord Kames, also influenced the direction of Scottish common sense philosophy, specifically with his Essays on the principles of morality and natural religion (1751).
Henry Grey Graham (1842—1906), Scottish men of letters in the eighteenth century.
Jean de Castillon … à Utrecht, chez Henri Spruyt, 1768 [4], iv, 277, [1] p.
www.thoemmes.com /scottish/sense_biblio.htm   (14954 words)

  
 Food For Thought: Biographies
Massue, Henri de (Marquis de Ruvigny) (French soldier)
Matilda, Saint (Queen of Henry I of Germany)
Mayhew, Henry (English journalist; a founder of Punch)
www.junkfoodforthought.com /bio/bio_M.htm   (1786 words)

  
 Kelly article
Bourne, Frank C. A History of the Romans.
Cadbury, Henry J. The Book of Acts in History.
  London: Henry G. Bonn, York Street, Covent Gardens, 1850.
www.giveshare.org /churchhistory/kelly/bibliography.html   (293 words)

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