Letter by James Burnett, Lord Monboddo, Edinburgh, 1765 July 4
Date |
1765-07-04 |
Place |
Edinburgh |
Subject | |
Category | |
Keywords |
Society |
Current holder | |
Series number |
MS Acc10.108 |
Item number |
4903111 |
Access rights |
Request at location |
Rights |
Copyright Undetermined. Available for research. Not for loan. Copying of James Burnett’s copyright material permitted for research purposes. |
Country of origin | |
Language | |
Description from source |
1 item (5 p.) MS Acc10.108 comprises the letter written to an unknown recipient by James Burnett, Lord Monboddo, at Edinburgh, 4 July 1765. In the letter, Monboddo speculates upon his theory that humans were originally wild animals until the need to congregate for protection made them sociable humans, and from which a need for language evolved. He then wonders if any people have congregated for reasons other than protection, and advances a hypothesis that the inhabitants of New Holland may be regarded as almost wild, as he has heard they have very little social structure, not even language. He also expresses doubt about Baron de Lahontan’s statements about native Americans. Monboddo opens the letter by thanking the recipient’s acquaintances Monsieur Guynes and Monsieur Capronier for their assistance at the Bibliothèque du Roi; he closes by sending the best wishes of Dr John Hope, botanist and surgeon, and a Dr Clark (5 p.). |
Physical format |
Letters |
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