The Reading Room

John Stuart Mill

1806-1873

The English philosopher raised as an experiment in reason who became the great defender of individual liberty against the crowd. On Liberty sets out the harm principle, that the only purpose for which power can rightly be used against a person is to prevent harm to others, and argues that even false speech serves truth by forcing it to stay alive in argument. Considerations on Representative Government is his clear-eyed account of how self-rule is meant to work, and how it fails.

In the library

  • Considerations on Representative Government

    How representative democracy is supposed to work, and the ways it fails, set out by a man who thought hard about both. Mill defends self-government as...

  • On Liberty

    The clearest defense ever written of the freedom to be wrong. Mill's harm principle holds that the only ground for using power against a person is...