Robert Owen, at first regarded with suspicion …

Years: 1813 - 1813

Robert Owen, at first regarded with suspicion as a stranger, had soon won the confidence of his people.

The mills continue to have great commercial success, but some of Owen's schemes involve considerable expense, which displeases his partners.

Tired of the restrictions imposed on him by men who wish to conduct the business on the ordinary principles, Owen arranges in 1813 to have them bought out by new found investors.

These, including the classical liberal and utilitarian Jeremy Bentham and a well-known Quaker, William Allen, are content to accept just five thousand pounds return on their capital, allowing Owen a freer scope for his philanthropy.

In the same year, Owen first authors several essays in which he expounds on the principles which underlie his education philosophy.

Owen had originally been a follower of Bentham.

However, as time passes, Owen becomes more and more socialistic, whereas Bentham thinks that free markets (in particular, the rights for workers to move and choose their employers) would free the workers from the excess power of the capitalists.

At an early age, Owen had lost all belief in the prevailing forms of religion and had thought out a creed for himself, which he considers an entirely new and original discovery.

The chief points in this philosophy are that man's character is made not by him but for him, that it has been formed by circumstances over which he had no control, that he is not a proper subject either of praise or blame.

These principles lead up to the practical conclusion that the great secret in the right formation of man's character is to place him under the proper influences–physical, moral and social–from his earliest years.

The principles of the irresponsibility of man and of the effect of early influences form the key to Owen's whole system of education and social amelioration.

They are embodied in his first work, A New View of Society, or Essays on the Principle of the Formation of the Human Character, the first of four essays appearing in 1813.

Owen's new views theoretically belong to a very old system of philosophy, and his originality is to be found only in his benevolent application of them.

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