“THE GREATEST GOOD OF THE COMMUNITY IS INSEPARABLE FROM THE LIBERTY OF THE INDIVIDUAL”: FIRST EDITION OF MILL’S CLASSIC ON LIBERTY, 1859, HANDSOMELY BOUND
MILL, John Stuart. On Liberty. London: John W. Parker and Son, 1859. Octavo, modern full speckled brown calf, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, raised bands, maroon morocco spine label, marbled endpapers, all edges gilt.
First edition of Mill’s most famous work—“the final stage in the growth of Utilitarian doctrine… His arguments for freedom of every kind of thought or speech have never been improved on” (PMM)—a beautiful copy in handsome full calf-gilt.
“Mill realized that the ‘greatest good’ of the community is inseparable from the liberty of the individual. Hitherto, liberty had always been considered relative, in relation to tyranny or oppression: Mill extended tyranny to include a custom-ridden majority, and declared that ‘the sole end for which mankind is justified in interfering with liberty of action is self-protection… Many of Mill’s ideas are now the commonplaces of democracy. His arguments for freedom of every kind of thought or speech have never been improved on. He was the first to recognize the tendency of a democratically elected majority to tyrannize over a minority… Mill’s On Liberty remains his most widely read book. It represents the final stage in the growth of Utilitarian doctrine” (PMM 345). “On Liberty is regarded as one of the finest expressions of 19th-century liberalism” (Baugh, 1323). Bound without publisher’s advertisements.
Text very fresh and clean with only lightest infrequent foxing. A fine handsomely bound copy.