Abstract
Richard Price, Welsh dissenting minister, actuary, and moral philosopher, is best remembered for A Review of the Principal Questions in Morals, a masterpiece of eighteenth-century British ethical theory that anticipated some twentieth-century theses, such as the naturalistic fallacy. Price is also famous for his joining the American cause in the pamphlet literature that flourished during the American revolution. His pamphlet Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, published in London in February 1776, is credited with influencing events that led to the Declaration of Independence and, among other things, induced the Continental Congress in 1778 to grant him American citizenship on condition that he come here to accept it. One of the editors of the present volume, W. Bernard Peach, has already advanced Price's case for a more prominent niche in history with the publication of selections from the pamphlets, which he introduced by means of an insightful interpretative essay. Peach's earlier volume is Richard Price and the Ethical Foundations of the American Revolution.