亚历山大-吉利斯与亚当-斯密共济会与自爱的共鸣

Eugene Heath
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1766年,苏格兰年轻牧师亚历山大-吉利斯(Alexander Gillies)在基尔温宁教会(Lodge of Kilwinning)发表了一篇演讲,不仅体现了亚当-斯密道德理论的影响,而且阐明了基督教和共济会如何对自爱问题提出了截然不同但又相辅相成的回应。这篇文章部分是思想史,部分是传记,它研究了吉利斯的论述,考虑了吉利斯的生活细节,并确定他实际上是斯密在格拉斯哥大学的学生。文章随后探讨了史密斯在吉利斯的论述中所体现出的影响,并揭示了加尔文主义的自爱观念是如何在 18 世纪晚期产生共鸣的。在论述中,吉利斯引用了斯密道德理论中的一些主题:社会互动的力量、同情的力量和自爱的负面影响(这一主题也体现在斯密的同事威廉-利奇曼(William Leechman)的一些布道中)。与斯密一样,吉利斯也担心偏袒和派别问题。吉利斯提出建立自由共济会,作为对基督教的一种补充,以抵制因自爱而产生的偏袒倾向。在后来于 1774 年发表在《爱丁堡杂志与评论》上的讽刺作品中,吉利斯又对自爱的力量进行了批判。吉利斯对自爱的关注以及他对共济会的崭新立场在一定程度上源于他与史密斯的关系,这为我们了解十八世纪苏格兰的文化和思想提供了一个独特的视角,也为我们深入了解大学、教堂和共济会的复杂关系提供了机会。
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Alexander Gillies and Adam Smith: Freemasonry and the Resonance of Self-Love
In 1766 at the Lodge of Kilwinning, Alexander Gillies, a young Scottish minister, delivered a discourse that not only manifested the influence of Adam Smith's moral theory but articulated how Christianity and freemasonry proposed distinct but complementary responses to the problem of self-love. This article, part intellectual history and part biography, examines Gillies's discourse, taking into account details of Gillies's life and establishing that he was in fact a student of Smith's at the University of Glasgow. The article then considers Smith's influence, as evident in Gillies's discourse, and reveals how a Calvinist notion of self-love resonated into the late eighteenth century. In the discourse, Gillies invoked subjects redolent of Smith's moral theory: the force of social interaction, the power of sympathy and the negative influence of self-love (a theme also manifest in some sermons of Smith's colleague, William Leechman). Like Smith, Gillies also worried about partiality and faction. Gillies forwarded the institution of freemasonry as a means—complementary to Christianity—of counteracting the tendency to partiality, born of self-love. In a later satirical composition, published in 1774 in the Edinburgh Magazine and Review, Gillies extended another critique of the power of self-love. Forged in part from his relation to Smith, Gillies's concern with self-love and his fresh stance on freemasonry yield a distinct perspective on eighteenth-century Scottish culture and ideas and offer insight into the complex relations of university, kirk and masonic lodge.
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