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John Stuart Mill - one minor mistake
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57,161 Views • Jun 4, 2023 • Click to toggle off description
I am writing a book! If you to know when it is ready (and maybe win a free copy), submit your email on my website: www.jeffreykaplan.org/
I won’t spam you or share your email address with anyone.

This is the first in a series of video lectures built for my college course in the philosophy of language.

John Stuart Mill lived in England from 1806 to 1873. He was a philosopher and also a Member of Parliament. Much of his philosophical work is in moral and political philosophy. He was the student of Jeremy Bentham and, like Bentham, an advocate of Utilitarianism. He was the second Member of Parliament to argue that women should be granted the right to vote. Mill also wrote one of the early and central works in the philosophy of language, 'Of Names,' which is what we are reading for this course.

This video lecture discusses several distinctions among types of names that Mill introduces:
General Names vs. Singular Names
Collective Names vs. Non-Collective Names
Connotative Names vs. Non-Connotative Names
But it important to note that Mill's term "names" doesn't just include proper names, like “Susan” or “Frederick” or “Dartmouth” or “North Carolina.” The term also encompasses, for example, definite descriptions, like “the tallest human on Earth,” “the cat,” and “the teacher of Plato.”
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Views : 57,161
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Jun 4, 2023 ^^


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YouTube Comments - 191 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@kenta8412

10 months ago

My day is made when this man post a video

91 |

@local-admin

10 months ago

I’m still catching up on all of your content. Thanks for making these videos for public consumption you are truly a gold nugget in a pile of slag.

56 |

@douglaslawrence6580

10 months ago

Too often, the ability to teach well is overlooked and undervalued. I appreciate your skill and passion. Keep it up, homie.

21 |

@zog9850

10 months ago

I never took any philosophy courses when I was in college some 40+ years ago. I truly love seeing a bit of what I missed by watching these videos. My sincere thanks for taking the effort to pull these off!

34 |

@MebThemes

10 months ago

Keep doing what you are doing. You're a fantastic professor. You present important topics in an interesting and engaging way. Among my favorite philosophy YouTube channels.

22 |

@danknfrshtv

10 months ago

New Kaplan video day is a good day.

Mate, you're my number one go-to teacher to fire me up when I get bogged down in my PhD candidature. I'm halfway through, and I'm going to have to include you in my dedications because you've been with me from the start and are honestly right up there among the most influential professors in my life. I link my undergrads up to your channel and on occasion I've let your videos do some of the heavy lifting in the classroom, because the students consistently respond positively to the material discussions afterwards.

15 |

@myfriend9194

10 months ago

I love that I get to see you today. It's actually crazy that you would post a video on Mill right now because I just finished reading "The Subjection of Women."

14 |

@coffeeisgood102

10 months ago

Your videos give a deeper understanding of the everyday world we live in. They provoke a person think about and analyze their surroundings using critical judgment of the issue.

2 |

@erikefse9050

10 months ago

Great video, just went through this material in Principles of Logic at university, it was a great class, I loved it. Great video as always!!!

3 |

@unhingedconnoisseur164

10 months ago

I love how the first 2 names that immediately came to Jeffrey's mind to give examples of proper names were "Abraham" and "Sally"

3 |

@fxm5715

10 months ago

Oh, man, don't leave me hangin' Dr. Kaplan! I'm not used to watching these as they are produced. I've been spoiled by such a rich back catalog to explore. Please, keep 'em coming.

1 |

@cleganebowldog6626

10 months ago

Great video- I tried reading Mill's paper in advance and had real difficulty visualizing his meaning on regiments, which you explain so clearly!

1 |

@ZOMBIEHEADSHOTKILLER

10 months ago

your skill to write backwards is impressive. i would never know it was backwards if seen on its own.

4 |

@jgjonola

8 months ago

How long have I been missing out on these videos? My goodness, what a wonderful professor he is. I’m now going to lose hours of my life watching all his videos.

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@PaulPassarelli

10 months ago

I really appreciate it when a short talk like this gives me some insight into how my own mind works. My memory for names is just terrible. I will generally say that it;s the fault of them being proper nouns and just leave it at that. But to learn that it's due to the connotative vs non-connotative distinction which lets me easily retain the link & association of what someone does to their identity. e.g. the actor that played Dr. David Banner in "The Incredible Hulk" and played the father in "The Courtship of Eddie's Father", yet I cannot instantly recall his character name, or the name of the actor, even though I know it's Bill Bixby.

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@Google_Censored_Commenter

10 months ago

Looking forward to the next lecture, because clearly there's still some attribute about Frank which we're identifying with. We're not just applying labels to empty vessels with no informational content, or we wouldn't be able to preserve the meaning of what we're labeling.

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@Tyler-hq5cl

10 months ago

I'm not going to lie, this is your only video as of yet that I cannot fully grasp... but I'm always impressed by your content!

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@mialaretcharles6621

10 months ago

Thank you for this informative video. I was struggling with the mathematical theory of categories and why it was replacing the set theory through excluding the notion of element. I feel Stuart Mill ideas provide some light as for why it was necessary.

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@thorin2330

10 months ago

your videos are crazy good. pls never stop doing youtube

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@puzzardosalami3443

10 months ago

Please keep on going man

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