ABSTRACT

Best known for reviving the tradition of classical liberalism, F. A. Hayek was also a prominent scholar of the philosopher John Stuart Mill. One of his greatest undertakings was a collection of Mill’s extensive correspondence with his longstanding friend and later companion and wife, Harriet Taylor-Mill. Hayek first published the Mill-Taylor correspondence in 1951, and his edition soon became required reading for any study of the nineteenth-century foundations of liberalism.
          
This latest addition to the Collected Works of F. A. Hayek series showcases the fascinating intersections between two of the most prominent thinkers from two successive centuries. Hayek situates Mill within the complex social and intellectual milieu of nineteenth-century Europe—as well as within twentieth-century debates on socialism and planning—and uncovers the influence of Taylor-Mill on Mill’s political economy. The volume features the Mill-Taylor correspondence and brings together for the first time Hayek’s related writings, which were widely credited with beginning a new era of Mill scholarship.

part |2 pages

Part I. John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor: Their Friendship and Subsequent Marriage

chapter |2 pages

Acknowledgements

chapter |2 pages

Abbreviations and Symbols Used

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

One Harriet Taylor and Her Circle (1830)

chapter 3|16 pages

Three On Marriage and Divorce (about 1832)

chapter 4|13 pages

Four Friends and Gossip (1834– 1842)

chapter 6|37 pages

Six A Joint Production (1847– 1849)

chapter 9|30 pages

Nine Illness (1851– 1854)

chapter 10|18 pages

Ten Italy and Sicily (1854– 1855)

chapter 11|17 pages

Eleven Greece (1855)

chapter |3 pages

Appendix I Poems by Harriet Taylor

chapter |1 pages

Appendix III Family Trees

part |2 pages

Part II. Related Writings

chapter 4|4 pages

Fourteen J. S. Mill’s Correspondence

chapter 17|1 pages

Seventeen Portraits of J. S. Mill

chapter 23|23 pages

Twenty- Three Related Correspondence