The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham

Critical edition of the writings of Jeremy Bentham From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham is a series of volumes under production at the Bentham Project which, when complete, will form a definitive edition of the writings of the philosopher and reformer Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832). The series includes those texts that were published during Bentham's lifetime, but also the many texts that remained unpublished at his death and exist only in manuscript.

Scope and history

The Collected Works is intended to supersede two earlier editions. The first is the 11-volume The Works of Jeremy Bentham (1838–43), edited by Bentham's friend and literary executor, John Bowring. This edition omits Bentham's writings on religion and is now considered flawed in many points of detail. The second is the 3-volume Jeremy Bentham's Economic Writings (1952–54), edited by Werner Stark, which has likewise been subject to criticism.[1]

The series is published under the auspices of the Bentham Project, based in the Faculty of Laws at University College London (UCL), whose library holds the majority of Bentham's surviving manuscripts. The Bentham Project currently consists of four members of staff: Professor Philip Schofield, the Director of the Project and General Editor of the Collected Works; Dr Tim Causer; Dr Chris Riley; and Dr Peter Lythe.[2] Since 2010, the Project has also hosted Transcribe Bentham, a crowdsourcing initiative for transcribing Bentham's manuscripts. Once edited, the output of this initiative is intended to appear in future Collected Works volumes.

The Bentham Project is governed by the Bentham Committee, which was established in 1959. The first volume in the Collected Works appeared in 1968, and to date 38 volumes have been published.[3] The initial estimate was that the series would eventually run to approximately 38 volumes, but this figure has since risen to a projected total of 85.[4] The series is divided into two sequences: the Correspondence (including letters both to and from Bentham) and the Works (writings which Bentham intended for publication, although many never progressed beyond drafts or outlines).

From 1968 to 1981, the series was published by the Athlone Press (the former publishing house of the University of London). From 1983 to 2019, it was published by Oxford University Press under its Clarendon Press imprint. The first five volumes of Correspondence, originally published by Athlone Press, were reissued with minor corrections in 2017 by UCL Press.

Since the February 2022 publication of Panopticon versus New South Wales, and Other Writings on Australia,[5] the Collected Works has been published by UCL Press in hardback, paperback, and open-access PDF formats.

General Editors

The General Editors of the series have been:

  • J. H. Burns (1961–79)
  • J. R. Dinwiddy (1977–83)
  • Fred Rosen (1983–94)
  • Fred Rosen and Philip Schofield (1995–2003)
  • Philip Schofield (2003–present)

Published volumes

The 14 volumes of Correspondence and 24 volumes of Works (the Works volumes are not sequentially numbered) that have been published to date are:

Correspondence

Works

— Now superseded by: Bentham, Jeremy (2010). Schofield, Philip (ed.). Of the Limits of the Penal Branch of Jurisprudence. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780199570737.

References

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