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Aims
The aim of the Bentham Project is to produce a new scholarly
edition of the works and correspondence of Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832), the influential jurist, philosopher, and social scientist,
whom A.J.P. Taylor described as `the most formidable reasoner who
ever applied his gifts to the practical questions of
administration and politics'.
The case for producing a new edition of Bentham's works rests
partly on the importance of his thought, and partly on the
inadequate and incomplete fashion in which his works were
previously published. His writings are remarkable for their
range, originality and influence. He was one of the greatest
reformers, perhaps the greatest, in the history of English law.
He was a legal philosopher of major importance, being one of the
founders of the theory of legal positivism. In ethics he
provided the classic exposition of the utilitarian theory which
has been a major strand in moral philosophy since the eighteenth
century. In political thought he was important both as a critic
of established doctrines such as that of natural law, and as the
originator of one of the main theoretical justifications for
democracy. In the fields of public administration and social
policy, he arguably had more influence than any other thinker on
the process of administration and social reform in Victorian
Britain. In economic thought, his ideas about the measurement
of utility lie at the root of modern theories of cost-benefit
analysis and welfare economics. He has been recognized, too, as
a pioneer in other fields ranging from international law and the
birth control movement to motivational psychology and deontic
logic.
In 1968 when the first two volumes of the new Collected Works
appeared, Maurice Cranston wrote in The Guardian: `Of all
the great theorists of the Age of Reason, Jeremy Bentham has
hitherto been the most neglected'. This neglect was attributable
in part to the unsatisfactory nature of the only collection of
his works which then existed, brought out by his disciple Sir
John Bowring in 1843, eleven years after Bentham's death. This
edition was unattractive in format and so closely printed as to
be barely legible. Moreover, it omitted a number of works that
had been published in Bentham's lifetime (notably those
concerning religion), as well as many substantial works which had
not been published but which survived in manuscript. The memoir
of Bentham contained in the last two volumes, which was described
by Sir Leslie Stephen as one of the worst biographies in the
English language, included only a fraction of his correspondence.
Much of the editing was of very poor quality, and several of the
works included by Bowring were translations into English of
French versions of Bentham's writings which had been edited and
published in the early nineteenth century by his Genevan
follower, Etienne Dumont.
Dumont's recensions had a very wide circulation and were
largely responsible for giving Bentham an international
reputation; but although based on Bentham's manuscripts they departed from them in various ways and presented his ideas in a
somewhat simplified form. The policy of the Bentham Project is
to return to what Bentham himself actually wrote, for as
Professor D.D. Raphael said in The Times Literary
Supplement, 27 September 1974: `The more we come to know his
writings (as contrasted with the presentation of his thought by
his contemporary editors, Dumont and Bowring), the more clearly
we see that Bentham was a powerful and subtle thinker.'
The task of producing the new edition is a daunting one. It
involves the exploration of a very substantial body of manuscript
material, the principal collections being those in University
College itself, and in the British Library. With regard to
Bentham's correspondence, which has never before been
comprehensively collected, material from a much larger group of
archive collections has to be assembled and annotated.
In addition, for works published during Bentham's lifetime,
contemporary editions must be collated, and decisions of a
complex character taken in regard to the authority to be ascribed
to various versions of the texts. It is envisaged that when
completed the edition will comprise approximately seventy
volumes, of which fourteen will be devoted to Bentham's
correspondence. Such an edition will, it is hoped, make
available a fuller and more inclusive view of Bentham's thought
and of his contribution to the science of man and society than
has been possible hitherto.
Supervising the Project is the Bentham Committee, established in 1959 as a
committee of the Council of University College London. The Committee has been
chaired successively by Lord Cohen, Lord Robbins, Professor H.L.A. Hart and
Professor
W.L. Twining. The present chairman is Professor
J. Wolff.
Since 1968, twenty six volumes of the new Collected Works have been published
under the auspices of the Bentham Committee, eight of them by the Athlone
Press
and the last eighteen by the Oxford
University Press.
This page last modified
2 April, 2009
by Irena
Nicoll
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