Robert William Mackay Explained

Robert William Mackay (1803–1882) was a British philosophical and religious author. He is best known for The Progress of the Intellect (1850). Charles Hardwick in his Christ and other Masters grouped Mackay's religious views, with those of William Johnson Fox and Theodore Parker, as falling under a heading "absolute religion".[1]

Life

Born 27 May 1803 in Piccadilly, London, he was the only son of John Mackay, and was educated at Winchester College. He matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford, 15 Jan. 1821, graduating B.A. 1824 and M.A. 1828, and winning the chancellor's prize for Latin verse. He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1828, but turned to theology and philosophy.[2]

Mackay was independently wealthy,[3] and a supporter of the Westminster Review.[4] He was a secularist follow of George Jacob Holyoake, but did not share his political views.[5] He died 23 February 1882.[2]

Works

Mackay was in the group of freethinkers associated with John Chapman.[6] He published:[2]

The Sophistes of Plato, translated, with explanatory Notes and an Introduction on Ancient and Modern Sophistry, 1868, and Plato's Meno, translated, with explanatory Notes and Introduction, and a preliminary Essay on the Moral Education of the Greeks, 1869, were translations.[2]

Family

Mackay married in 1852 Frances Maseres Fellowes, daughter of Robert Fellowes, who survived him.[13]

External links

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. Book: Masuzawa . Tomoko . The Invention of World Religions: Or, How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism . 26 April 2012 . University of Chicago Press . 978-0-226-92262-1 . 92 . en.
  2. Mackay, Robert William. 35.
  3. Book: Ashton . Rosemary . 142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London . 11 January 2011 . Random House . 978-1-4464-2678-4 . 96 . en.
  4. Book: Ashton . Rosemary . 142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London . 11 January 2011 . Random House . 978-1-4464-2678-4 . 128 . en.
  5. Book: Royle . Edward . Victorian Infidels: The Origins of the British Secularist Movement, 1791-1866 . 1974 . Manchester University Press . 978-0-7190-0557-2 . 250 . en.
  6. 17562. Gavin. Budge. Mackay, Robert William(1803–1882).
  7. Book: Anderson . Amanda . Shaw . Harry E. . A Companion to George Eliot . 19 January 2016 . John Wiley & Sons . 978-1-119-07247-8 . 478 . en.
  8. Book: The Reasoner . 1851 . 211 . en.
  9. Book: Rectenwald . Michael . Nineteenth-Century British Secularism: Science, Religion and Literature . 8 March 2016 . Springer . 978-1-137-46389-0 . 91 . en.
  10. Book: Francis . Mark . Herbert Spencer and the Invention of Modern Life . 23 December 2014 . Routledge . 978-1-317-49346-4 . 142 . en.
  11. Book: Mackay . Robert William . The Eternal Gospel . 1867 . Williams & Norgate, Thomas Scott . London, Ramsgate . en.
  12. Book: Mackay . Robert William . The Adversaries of St. Paul in 2nd Corinthians . 1875 . Thomas Scott . en.
  13. Book: Howard . Joseph Jackson . Crisp . Frederick Arthur . Visitation of England and Wales . 1911. 17 . 2–3 . Priv. printed . London .