James Logan's "The Duties of Man as They May be Deduced from Nature"


Book Description

"James Logan (1674–1751) of Philadelphia was a luminary with few equals in British America in the first half of the eighteenth century. His passion for learning is exemplified in the scholar’s library he amassed of nearly 3,000 titles, which had no match in the colonies. He wrote and published on botanical science and optics in European journals and was an accomplished mathematician and astronomer. His mastery of languages ancient and modern enabled him to keep up with intellectual developments in Britain and the Continent. At the same time, as the representative of the Penn family in the colony, coming to America when he was twenty-five, he was enmeshed in Pennsylvania politics, holding several major positions, including Chief Justice, and along the way he made a fortune by investing in the fur trade. It was perhaps to be expected that in 1734 he turned his creative drive to moral philosophy, the discipline in which were located the most engrossing and urgent issues of the day, culminating in the classic works of figures like David Hume, Adam Smith, and Immanuel Kant. Logan aimed to write a publishable treatise on the subject and compiled six or seven chapters of varying sophistication, but in the end the challenges were too great, and this ambition survived only in a manuscript—“The Duties of Man As They May Be Deduced from Nature”—which until about 1969 was assumed to be hopelessly dispersed in the archives of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania or altogether lost. In this analysis, Norman Fiering gives Logan’s effort new life."--




Benjamin Franklin's America


Book Description

Volume I of Benjamin Franklin's America examines the moral, intellectual and scientific accomplishments of Benjamin Franklin. The often neglected relationships with Cotton Mather and James Logan are examined, and his scientific investigations into electrical phenomena are explore in depth. His writings on Economics and finance are discussed, and other important features of his career, including his military leadership and his relationship with George Washington also examined.




Hidden in Plain Sight


Book Description

This book contains major contributions on Dante, Machiavelli, a six part series on the self-directed creative evolution of the human species, a ten part series on Benjamin Franklin and other works. Its theme is the creativity and nobility of the human identity. Man the discoverer, Man the inventor, Man the composer. It stands in contrast to the bestial view of humanity which is now rampant in our culture.




The Protestant Temperament


Book Description

Bringing together an extraordinary richness of evidence—from letters, diaries, and other intimate family writing of the 17th and 18th centuries—Philip Greven, the distinguished scholar of colonial history explores the strikingly distinctive ways in which Protestant children were reared, and the Protestant temperament shaped, in America. Through this cache of remarkable and remarkably immediate and moving material – the family papers of some of America’s most famous theologians, political figures, lawyers, and ministers as well as those of lesser-known contemporaries (farmers, merchants, housewives) who embodied Protestant life and wrote about it most expressively—Philip Greven traces the hidden continuities of religious experience, of attitudes toward God, children, the will, the body, sexuality, achievement, pleasure, virtue, and selfhood among the three Protestant groups of the time. He examines, in turn, the three strains that persisted regardless of denomination. First, the “evangelicals” (their dictum for raising children: “Break their wills that you may save their souls”), ruled by a hostility to the self, a feeling that selfhood is the source of sin, too dangerous to be sought or desired (Jonathan Edwards wrote: “I have been before God and have given myself, all that I am, and have, to God; so that I am not, in any respect, my own . . . I have given myself clear away”). And we hear the products of this upbringing, in their twenties and thirties, speaking of themselves in the harshest tones (“My affections carnal, corrupt, and disordered”), distrusting themselves in the most profound ways (a woman faced with the choice of a husband wrote: “I dare not decide myself and dread nothing more than to be left to the Bent of my own heart”). In counterpoint, we see the “moderates,” poised between duty and personal desire, preoccupied but not obsessed with morality, more interested in self-control than self-suppression (an eminent Unitarian, the Reverend Theodore Parker of Boston, wrote: “The will needs regulation, not destroying. I should as soon think of breaking the legs of a horse in training him, as a child’s will”). And, finally, we see the “genteel” in polite society, taking their state of grace for granted, more interested in self-assertion than self-control, completely at ease with ambition and worldliness—music, dancing, games, convivial drinking, hunting, and sports all an integral part of the children’s lives as they grow into maturity; the boys groomed for social responsibility, the girls encouraged to be “steady, studious, docile, with a mild and winning presence, a sweet, obliging temper . . . ” The Protestant Temperament uncovers the personal experience and the psychological and social effects of religion and piety in the American of the 17th and 18th centuries, the feelings as well as the beliefs of religious people. Fascinating and groundbreaking in its revelations and its radical reassessment of the role of religion in early American life, Philip Greven’s book is a major intellectual event, an important and illuminating interpretation of the American Protestant experience.




Young Benjamin Franklin


Book Description

In this new account of Franklin's early life, Pulitzer finalist Nick Bunker portrays him as a complex, driven young man who elbows his way to success. From his early career as a printer and journalist to his scientific work and his role as a founder of a new republic, Benjamin Franklin has always seemed the inevitable embodiment of American ingenuity. But in his youth he had to make his way through a harsh colonial world, where he fought many battles with his rivals, but also with his wayward emotions. Taking Franklin to the age of forty-one, when he made his first electrical discoveries, Bunker goes behind the legend to reveal the sources of his passion for knowledge. Always trying to balance virtue against ambition, Franklin emerges as a brilliant but flawed human being, made from the conflicts of an age of slavery as well as reason. With archival material from both sides of the Atlantic, we see Franklin in Boston, London, and Philadelphia as he develops his formula for greatness. A tale of science, politics, war, and religion, this is also a story about Franklin's forebears: the talented family of English craftsmen who produced America's favorite genius.







Benjamin Franklin Unmasked


Book Description

"Taking the Autobiography as the key to Franklin's thought, Weinberger argues that previous assessments have not yet probed to the bottom of Ben's famous irony and elusiveness. While others take the self-portrait as an elder statesman's relaxed and playful retrospection, Weinberger unveils it as the window to Franklin's deepest reflections on God, virtue, justice, equality, natural rights, love, the good life, the modern technological project, and the place and limits of reason in politics and human experience. Along the way, Weinberger explores Franklin's ribald humor, usually ignored or toned down by historians and critics, and shows it to be charming - and philosophic.".