JamesMill made this quasi-paternalist view the cornerstone of British colonial policy.
2
This is the view propounded by JamesMill, and by Mackintosh.
3
JamesMill was the typical beef-eating Englishman described by Taine.
4
Mr. JamesMill, of the India House, in reply to a request for assistance, wrote:
5
JamesMill's History of British India, 1840, vol.
6
Now, to Britons trained to look with JamesMill's disdainful eye, it looked corrupt, decadent, and barbaric.
7
Or learned men like JamesMill.
8
We had a very agreeable party: Duncannon, Charles Grant, Sharp, Chantrey the sculptor, Bobus Smith, and JamesMill.
9
[Footnote 1: Tradition ascribes this piece to the pen of JamesMill.
10
Of the assoication psychologists JamesMill did little more towards the analysis of the sentiments of beauty than re-state Alison's doctrine.
11
In Maitland House lived JamesMill, author of the "History of India," and father of the better known J. S. Mill.
12
In 1823, in conjunction with JamesMill and others, he established the Westminster Review, but he did not himself contribute largely to it.
13
In 1818 a number of Liberals-Brougham ,JamesMill, and others-combinedto establish an Infant School in London, importing a teacher from New Lanark.
14
Then, in 1806, the East India Company commissioned a thirty-three-year-old Scotsman named JamesMill to write a history of the British presence in India.
15
John Stuart Mill, the eldest son of the philosopher, JamesMill, was born in London on May 20, 1806.
16
I do not find that JamesMill ever disputed the proposition that women have souls: he evidently considered the matter quite beyond argument-theyhadn't.