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Three names dominate the trade in philosophy books in the period 1695-1830: John Locke, David Hume and Dugald Stewart. Locke, Berkeley and Hume have, of course, earned the respect and attention of academic philosophers and general readers for well over two centuries now. As professor of moral philosophy at the University of Edinburgh from 1785 to his retirement in 1810, Hume had a great effect on a generation of students that spread from Edinburgh to the Continent and North America and, hence, had a profound effect on the Scottish Enlightenment. His first book, published in 1792, Elements of the philosophy of the human mind, formed part of a three-volume set; a second volume appeared in 1814, and a third in 1827. Some may rightly believe that Stewart's influence adversely affected Britain's nineteenth-century philosophers, who, with the exception of John Stuart Mill, did not shine as luminously as those from the eighteenth century.
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