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Watkins Biographical Dictionary

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Watkins's Biographical Dictionary, also called The Universal Biographical Dictionary was originally published in 1800, with a second edition in 1825, as 'An Historical Account of the lives, characters and works of the most eminent persons in every age and nation, from the earliest times to the present'. It was compiled by John Watkins, LLD, published by Longman, Rees Orme, Brown and Green.

Entry on Hume

The dictionary is notable for its entry on the philosopher David Hume, which notes that "[The Treatise] he published in London in 1738, but its reception not answering his expectations, he printed a small analysis of it, in a sixpenny pamphlet, to make it sell'. Since the pamphlet (An Abstract of the Treatise of Human Nature) was published anonymously, it is not known how the author of the article came by this information. Norman Kemp Smith has speculated that the firm of Longman's, who published both Watkin's dictionary, and volume III of the A Treatise of Human Nature, was the channel through which the tradition of Hume's authorship of the Abstract was preserved[1].

References

  • Biography: writing lives By Catherine Neal Parke
  • "New Books", Norman Kemp Smith, Mind 1938 XLVII(188):522-524,
  • An Abstract of a Book lately Published; Entitled, A Treatise of Human Nature, &c. Wherein the Chief Argument of that Book is farther Illustrated and Explained, (London, 1740).
  • "The Authorship of the Abstract Revisited" David Raynor, Hume Studies, Volume XIX, Number 1 (April, 1993) 213-215 [1].


Notes

  1. ^ Norman Kemp Smith, Mind 1938