Brains and Numbers: Elitism, Comtism, and Democracy in Mid-Victorian England |
Other editions - View all
Brains and Numbers: Elitism, Comtism, and Democracy in Mid-Victorian England Christopher Kent No preview available - 1978 |
Common terms and phrases
A.V. Dicey academic radicals activities agitation aristocracy Bagehot Bright Burke C.H. Pearson Cambridge Carlyle century Chamberlain Church civil claimed clerisy Club Cobden Coleridge Coleridge's College Comte's Comtist creed critical culture d'Auguste Comte democracy doctrine election élitist England English Comtists F.D. Maurice fellowships Fortnightly Review Frederic Harrison French Revolution friends G.C. Brodrick Gladstone Goldwin Smith Hadwen Harrison Papers Harrison to Beesly Harrison to Morley Henry Ibid ideal ideas increasingly influence institutions intellectual élite intellectual in politics issue James Bryce John Morley John Stuart Mill journalism journalists labour leaders Leslie Stephen Letters Liberal Library London Matthew Arnold ment metaphysical mid-Victorian middle class Mill moral Morley's movement Order and Progress organ Oxford Oxford Union Parliament particularly Pattison politician positivism Positivist profession proletariat public opinion remarked Saturday Review social spiritual T.H. Green tion trade union university radicals university reform Victorian working-class wrote young


