Dr Bradford Bow

Dr Bradford Bow
Dr Bradford Bow
Dr Bradford Bow

BA, PGDHS, MA, PhD, FHEA, FRHistS, OSS 大将軍

Senior Lecturer

About
Email Address
bradford.bow@abdn.ac.uk
Office Address

Department of History,

Crombie Annexe, Room G11, Meston Walk,

King's College, Aberdeen, AB24 3FX

 

Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies,

HMA2 No.19 College Bounds (Humanity Manse),

King's College, University of Aberdeen,

Old Aberdeen, AB24 3FX

 

Telephone: +44 (0)1224 208650

School/Department
School of Divinity, History, Philosophy & Art History

Biography

Dr Bradford Bow is an intellectual historian of America, Scotland and Britain during the long eighteenth century, with a broader interest in the global contexts of Enlightenment intellectual and moral culture. Dr Bow completed a PhD in the fields of Enlightenment History and Scottish Diaspora Studies at the University of Edinburgh in 2012. During the 2012-13 academic year, he held a postdoctoral fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) and an adjunct lecturing position at Edinburgh University. At that time, he also served as the Acting Director of the MSc Intellectual History programme and organised research activities for the Carnegie Trust funded project ‘Scotland’s Trans-Atlantic Relations’ (STAR). Following this, he held the inaugural Jack Miller Center-Huntington Research Fellowship at the Huntington Library. Dr Bow returned to the University of Edinburgh during the 2013-14 academic year as a Teaching Fellow in Enlightenment History and Deputy Director of the MSc Intellectual History programme. Afterwards, he was an Assistant Professor of Global Intellectual History at Yonsei University (Seoul, South Korea) between 2014 and 2019. Dr Bow joined the School of Divinity, History and Philosophy in August 2019. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, and Distinguished Shinhan Professor at Yonsei University.

Research

Research Overview

My research interests centre on the global intellectual history of Scottish Enlightenment philosophy during the long eighteenth century (1660-1840). From a transnational and global perspective, I address questions concerning the conception, diffusion, and reception of the Scottish philosophical tradition of teaching metaphysics as moral philosophy, applied ethics, and political economy. 

Current Research

The two strands of my current research centre on two large-scale book projects that examine the global intellectual history of the Scottish Enlightenment in the British imperial world and the intellectual history of Aberdonian common sense.

My book project on the eastern frontiers of the Scottish Enlightenment during its supposed decline in the British Isles is a comparative study of Scottish empiricism amongst British philosophical and literary societies at Madras, Calcutta and Bombay from c.1784 to 1833. It aims to shed new light on the role of Scottish Enlightenment naturalism within an interconnected British imperial world.

My book manuscript, The Wise Club: The Aberdeen Philosophical Society in the Scottish Enlightenment, explores different versions of ‘common sense’ that the Wise Club, which included Thomas Reid (1710-96), George Campbell (1719-96), John Gregory (1724-73), Alexander Gerard (1728-95), and James Beattie (1735-1803), set forth in their unpublished philosophical discourses and debates at taverns in Aberdeen between 1758 and 1773.

 

Past Research

 

My monograph, Dugald Stewart's Empire of the Mind, published by Oxford University Press in August 2022 sets forth a new understanding of the late Scottish Enlightenment in its transatlantic contexts. It comprises an intellectual history of what was at stake in moral education during a transitional period of revolutionary change in Scottish intellectual culture and within a globalising knowledge economy between 1772 and 1828. Seminal works in this field identify continuity of thought in the ‘spirit’ of a distinctive Scottish School of philosophy and a cross-generational ‘democratic intellect’ that took shape through the Scottish philosophical tradition in higher education. However, the legacy of Scottish philosophy in nineteenth-century education is largely misunderstood due to the scholarly marginalisation of Stewart’s educational doctrine. My book argues that Stewart’s novel and historically significant systematic approach to lifelong education democratised the Scottish Enlightenment pattern of philosophical thinking in the nineteenth-century Atlantic world and reformed the moral economy of the British imperial world.

Building on a very well-received podcast series that I coordinated, my co-edited volume with Michael Brown, 525 Years in the Pursuit of Truth: A New History of the University of Aberdeen, which is in production with Aberdeen University Press, explores the University’s transnational transmission of ideas since the foundation of King’s. And my edited volume, Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment, published by Oxford University Press in 2018 established a new understanding of the most influential philosophical system in the Scottish Enlightenment.

Supervision

Supervisees

Teaching

Programmes

Teaching Responsibilities

Areas of PG Supervision

I welcome approaches from prospective postgraduate students with an interest in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Scottish, British, American, Atlantic, Global, and Enlightenment History.

Publications

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  • Podcast:: Before and after Bishop Elphinstone: Creativity and learning in medieval and renaissance Aberdeen

    Armstrong, J., Bow, C. (ed.)
    Non-textual Forms: Digital or Visual Products
  • Review of Berry, Essays on Hume, Smith and the Scottish Enlightenment

    Bow, C.
    Scottish Historical Review, vol. 99, no. 1, pp. 151-152
    Contributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and Articles
  • Molyneux's Problem in the Scottish Enlightenment

    Bow, C. B.
    Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques, vol. 45, no. 3, pp. 22-41
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Questioning the historical and modern limits of Adam Ferguson's "ethical integrity": Response

    Bow, C. B.
    Syndicate
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment

    Bow, C. B.
    Oxford University Press (OUP), Oxford. 226 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • The “Final Causes” of Scottish Nationalism: Lord Kames on the political economy of enlightened husbandry, 1745-1782

    Bow, C. B.
    Historical Research, vol. 91, no. 252, pp. 296-313
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Dugald Stewart and the Legacy of Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment

    Bow, C. B.
    Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment. Bow, C. B. (ed.). Oxford University Press (OUP), pp. 200-220, 21 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Introduction: Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment

    Bow, C. B.
    Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment. Bow, C. B. (ed.). Oxford University Press (OUP), pp. 1-18, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Waging War for the Righteous: William Eaton on Enlightenment, Empire, and Coup d’état in the First Barbary War, 1801-1805

    Bow, C. B.
    History, vol. 101, no. 348, pp. 692-709
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • In Pursuit of “Moral Beauty” and Intellectual Pleasures: Dugald Stewart and Edinburgh’s literary culture, 1772-1810

    Bow, C. B.
    The Scottish Enlightenment and Literary Culture. McLean, R., Young, R., Simpson, K. (eds.). Bucknell University Press, pp. 153-170, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
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