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Mill and Newman

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... Arnold s Dover Beach (loss of faith) Mill s Autobiography (loss of feeling) END Review Major characteristics of Victorian period: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mill and Newman


1
Mill and Newman
  • ENGL 203
  • Dr. Fike

2
Review
  • Major characteristics of Victorian period
  • Expansion
  • Industrialization (steam power) led to misery for
    many
  • Communication (telegraph)
  • Advances in science (Darwin)
  • Religious controversy (doubt)

3
More Review
  • Dramatic monologue (T, B, A)
  • GRL vs. failed GRL (A vs. B)
  • Role of the poet in society (T)
  • Compensation for lack of faith (A)
  • A Arnold
  • B Browning
  • T Tennyson

4
Mills Dates
  • 1806 Birth
  • 1826 Nervous breakdown at age 20
  • 1859 On Liberty
  • 1873 Autobiography
  • 1873 Death

5
Background on Mill
  • The young JSM was fully educated by the age of 14
    in language and philosophy.
  • Therefore, his life was characterized by lack of
    emotion and of liberty.
  • On the other hand, the mature JSM, who wrote On
    Liberty, argues for the antithesis of his early
    experiences. Next slide.

6
Page 872-73/86-87
  • 872 Human nature is not.
  • 873 A person whose desires and impulses.
  • What is Mills point?

7
Possible Answer
  • Man is not a machine (steam engine
    mechanical 876/90) but an organism (trees
    874/88 emotion, body life), and freedom of
    thought is a great value vs. following custom or
    parental prescription.

8
Analogy to Blakes Eden and Beulah
  • Eden creativity
  • Beulah the realm of sexual joy, pleasure,
    repose.
  • You can reach Eden through Beulah.
  • Remember Bs emphasis on touch?

9
Mills Life
  • Fatherwifereasonemotion/sexual life (Beulah)
  • Therefore, his wife was a kind of savior for
    himshe nourished a part of him that had been
    neglected during his youth.
  • See top of page 874/88 Thus the mind. . .
    .
  • Sexual union opens up creativity (cf. Yeats).

10
Opposition in the Autobiography
  • Attainment of goals through the application of
    reason.
  • vs.
  • Personal happinessemotional fulfillment.
  • See the key question on 885-86/99-100 In this
    frame of mind.

11
What Mill Realizes
  • POINT Reason abrades (wears away, acts as an
    abrasive to) the emotions unless it exists in
    harmony with qualities that balance it. Page
    887/101 the habit of analysis reason has a
    tendency to wear away the feelings. . . . Also,
    Analytic habits . . . tend altogether to weaken
    those which are . . . a matter of feeling.
  • Page 888/102 All those to whom.
  • Last paragraph on 888/102 I went on with them
    mechanically (my emphasis).
  • POINT As academic persons, we must be careful
    not to let our humanity get lost in a shuffle of
    papers. Mill, the consummate young student,
    later warns us not to overdo study (reason) to
    the exclusion of all else (emotion, sexuality).

12
How Does Mill Change?
  • Page 889/103 When, however, not more than
    half.
  • What do you make of this passage?

13
Possible Answers
  • He reads about the death of a father in
    Marmontels Memoirs, which provides a model that
    Mill needs in order to feel constructive emotion.
  • Plus, the death of the father is symbolic it
    corresponds to the death of paternal control.
    (Someone says that you are never fully an adult
    until both of your parents are deadsaid in
    reference to JFK, Jr.)
  • The boy in the Memoirs becomes the father-figure
    in the family.
  • POINT Deep emotion the archetypal killing and
    taking the place of the father.
  • RESULT Mill is no longer his fathers lean,
    mean, studying machine.

14
Further Results of This Change
  • Lets discuss this question
  • How can you achieve happiness?
  • The answer is on 889/103, last par.

15
Possible Answer
  • You achieve happiness not as your object but as
    the by-product of some other endeavor such as
    helping others (the best way to be happy) or
    engaging in an activity that means something to
    you (cf. New York Stories if you have fun,
    others will want to join you).

16
The Importance of Balance
  • Mill begins to understand the importance of
    nourishing parts of himself other than the mind
    (e.g., the nonrational part). See 890/104.
  • Mills awakening corresponds to his growing
    interest in poetry and music, which, like
    Marmontels Memoirs, convey strong feeling.
  • See in particular WW on page 891/105 my
    reading wordsworth . . . was an important evnt
    in my life. And page 892/106 What made WWs
    poems a medicine. . . .
  • See the effect of The World Is Too Much with
    Us, page 174 next slide. How does this poem
    provide an analogy for the transformation that
    Mill achieved?

17
The World Is Too Much with Us
  • The world is too much with us late and soon,
  • Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers
  • Little we see in Nature that is ours
  • We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon!
  • The Sea that bares her bosom to the moon
  • The winds that will be howling at all hours,
  • And are up-gathered now like sleeping flowers
  • For this, for everything, we are out of tune
  • It moves us not.--Great God! I'd rather be
  • A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn
  • So might I, standing on this pleasant lea,
  • Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn
  • Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea
  • Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.

18
WWs Poetic Theory
  • Page 892/106
  • the love of rural objects and natural scenery
  • pleasure
  • feeling
  • joy
  • In other words, Mill responded in exactly the way
    WW says in the Preface that a reader should.

19
POINT
  • Emotional balance and liberty are linked.
  • In On Liberty he argues that a well-balanced
    person should enjoy liberty.
  • In other words, that work deals with the kind of
    person Mill becomes as a result of the crisis in
    his mental history.
  • AND WW, the quintessential Romantic poet, thus
    takes the edge off Mills quintessential
    Victorian rationalism.

20
Digression on the Liberal Arts
  • Poetry and music are things with no extrinsic
    value, but Mill endorses them, presumably as part
    of a liberal arts curriculum. Mill favors the
    liberal arts!
  • They create a well-balanced quality of mind,
    which is what Newman argues for in The Idea of a
    University.
  • See page 913/127, top par.

21
Two Types of Utility
  • Extrinsic utility__________ _________. See
    913/127, section 2.
  • Intrinsic utility, page 913-14/127-28, section 5

22
Possible Answer
  • Extrinsic utility immediate usefulness
  • Intrinsic utility something cannot be put to
    immediate use, but it is an end in itself because
    it enables goodness, which is prolific.
  • POINT Newman is against the Utilitarian
    objection to liberal education (i.e., the
    objection that it is worthless because it is not
    professional training). He favors instead an
    education that fosters a quality of mind over
    direct practical applicability. Such education,
    he says, has true utility.

23
Closed-Book (Unofficial) Pop Quiz
  • Answer True of False to following statements (3
    minutes)
  • The free expression of opinion must always be
    allowed. 
  • Those who do anything because it is the custom
    make no choice at all. 
  • Whatever is not a duty is a sin. 
  • Man needs no capacity but that of surrendering
    himself to the will of God. 
  • Whatever crushes individuality is despotism
  • Only the cultivation of individuality can produce
    well-developed human beings. 
  • Collective mediocrity rules America. 
  • Calvinism patronizes (i.e., serves as a sponsor
    for) pinched, hidebound people. 
  • Calvinist self-denial is better than pagan
    self-assertion. 
  • Eccentricity is admirable and essential. 
  • Women will never be the equals of men. 
  • There are definite moral and rational differences
    between men and women. 
  • You are more like a Dutch canal than a Niagara
    Falls. 
  •  

24
Group Activity
  • Get with a partner or a small group and check
    your answers against the text (next slide). You
    have 10 minutes.

25
Mills On Liberty Group Activity
  • The free expression of opinion must always be
    allowed (870/84).
  • Those who do anything because it is the custom
    make no choice at all (872/86).
  • Whatever is not a duty is a sin (874/88). 
  • Man needs no capacity but that of surrendering
    himself to the will of God (874/88). 
  • Whatever crushes individuality is despotism
    (875/89).
  • Only the cultivation of individuality can produce
    well-developed human beings (875/89). 
  • Collective mediocrity rules America (877/91). 
  • Calvinism patronizes (i.e., serves as a sponsor
    for) pinched, hidebound people (874/88). 
  • Calvinist self-denial is better than pagan
    self-assertion (874/88). 
  • Eccentricity is admirable and essential
    (878/92). 
  • Women will never be the equals of men (On the
    Subjection of Women). 
  • There are definite moral and rational differences
    between men and women (883/97). 
  • You are more like a Dutch canal than a Niagara
    Falls (876/90). 
  •  

26
Correct Answers
  1. False
  2. True
  3. False
  4. False
  5. True
  6. True
  7. True
  8. True
  9. False
  10. True
  11. False
  12. False
  13. ???

27
Summary of Mills Points in On Liberty
  • An individual person is not accountable to
    society for his actions insofar as they concern
    no one but himself. But when they have an impact
    on others, he becomes accountable. That is,
    there is a difference between freedom to do
    something positive and the right to be free from
    something negative. ?

28
From the HMXP Book
  • Pope John Paul II freedomfreedomconsists
    not in doing what we like, but in having the
    right to do what we ought (150).

29
Question/Brainstorming
  • What things does Mill favor/value?
  • What does he condemn?
  • Take 2 minutes and make a list.

30
What Mill Favors/Condemns
  • Mill favors the following
  • Individuality (873/87)
  • Choice
  • Spontaneity (873/87)
  • Opinion
  • Character
  • Differences between people
  • Cultivation of all human faculties
  • Genius/originality in thought or opinion
  • Eccentricity
  • Energy
  • Improvement
  • Mill condemns the following
  • Custom
  • Despotism
  • Mediocrity
  • POINT Liberty enables the things that Mill
    favors and helps us keep the things in this
    column at bay.

31
Governmental Interference
  • It is okay as long as it does not infringe upon
    liberty.
  • When an individual person can do a thing better,
    the government should stay out of it.
  • Even if individuals cannot do something better
    than government, they should do it for their own
    good/self-improvement.
  • Do not give the government more power than we
    need to give itavoid bureaucracy.
  • Government should encourage individual
    development and initiative.

32
Conclusion
  • Mill History
  • Past Repression spontaneity and individuality
  • (Romanticism)
  • Present Freedom the deficiency of personal
  • impulses
    and preferences
  • (Victorian period)
  • (This is why people must struggle as
  • Mill did.)
  • Both quotations are from page 873/87.

33
Re. assimilation (881/95) Mill 882/96, top
  • Industrialization (steam power)
  • Communication (telegraph)
  • Advances in science (Darwin) universal education
  • The increase of commerce and manufactures
    promotes it
  • Improvement in the means of communication
    promotes it
  • Every extension of education promotes it
  • POINT This work really clearly reflects the
    Victorian age think periodicity.

34
Periodicity
  • 18th Century/Neoclassical period Reason
  • Romantic period imagination
  • Victorian period reaction to imagination and
    feeling greater emphasis on reason ? literature
    about the resulting problems
  • Arnolds Dover Beach (loss of faith)
  • Mills Autobiography (loss of feeling)
  • END
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