John Oswald (activist)

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John Oswald (c. 1760/1730[1] – 14 September 1793) was a Scottish philosopher, writer, poet, social critic and revolutionary.

Early life

Little is known for certain regarding Oswald's early life. He was born between 1755 and 1760 in Edinburgh. His father is said to have been a coffee-house-keeper, or a goldsmith.[2] He became a student goldsmith himself.[3] It is said that Oswald learned Latin and Greek without a tutor, and later learned Arabic.

Oswald in India

File:Cry of Nature.jpg
Frontispiece of The Cry of Nature, London, 1791. Caption reads: "The butcher's knife hath laid low the delight of a fond dam, & the darling of Nature is now stretched in gore upon the ground."

Oswald served in the British Army as a Lieutenant of the Royal Highland Regiment, the forty-second regiment of foot.[2] He served as a recruiting officer in Scotland during the American Revolution, and then in 1780 to the Malabar Coast of India. Oswald's exposure to Hindu vegetarianism in India had an impact on his philosophy which he describes in The Cry of Nature or An Appeal to Mercy and Justice on Behalf of the Persecuted Animals, published in 1791.[3] This is considered an important work of western vegetarianism.[4]

Return to Britain

Oswald could no longer continue as an army officer. He left the army and returned to Britain in 1783, and began a period as an author of poetry and social criticism, and editor of The British Mercury, a periodical publication. During this period, Oswald wrote a sharp polemic in favour of republicanism, Review of the Constitution of Great Britain, and an anti-religious leaflet Ranae Comicae Evangelizantes: or the Comic Frogs turned Methodist, in which he supported atheism.[3]

Oswald in France

With the outbreak of the French Revolution of 1789, Oswald travelled to Paris, and soon joined the Jacobin Club. In that body, he pressed for more energetic intervention by the Jacobins in British affairs, arguing that a revolution in England was essential for peace between the two nations. An address to a Manchester radical organization was sent by the Jacobins on Oswald's urgings. According to some reports, Oswald was sent to Ireland to offer French support for an Irish rebellion, but little appeared to come of this effort.

In March 1792, Oswald called for the universal arming of the masses, and began organizing a small army of sans-culottes in Paris known as the First Battalion of Pikers. With the outbreak of monarchist counter-revolution in La Vendée, the First Battalion proceeded against the insurgents. Oswald died in the battle of Ponts-de-Cee on 14 September 1793.

The Cry of Nature

John Oswald, like his contemporary Rousseau, argued that modern society was in conflict with man's nature. Oswald argued in The Cry of Nature or an Appeal to Mercy and Justice on Behalf of the Persecuted Animals, that man is naturally equipped with feelings of mercy and compassion. [5] If each man had to personally experience the death of the animals he ate, so argued Oswald, a vegetarian diet would be far more common. The division of labour, however, allows modern man to eat flesh without experiencing the prompting of man's natural sensitivities, while the brutalization of modern man made him inured to these sensitivities.[5] Although Oswald gave compassion a central place in his philosophy, and was a vegetarian, he was not a pacifist, as evidenced by the fact that he died fighting in the French Revolution.[5]

Works by John Oswald

Writings about John Oswald

Notes

  1. According to Henry Salt and Howard Williams he was born in 1730. See Animals' Rights Considered in Relation to Social Progress Also an Essay on Vivisection in America, by Henry Salt, Macmillan & Co., 1894, p. 113; and The Ethics of Diet by Howard Williams, University of Illinois Press, 2003, p. 179.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Scottish Regiments: Royal Highland Regiment" Scottish Military – Highland Regiments, by William Melven, M.A., Glasgow
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 (Dutch) "John Oswale: De Eerst Theoreticus Van De Directe Democratie?" ("John Oswald: The First Theorist of Direct Democracy?"), by Roger Jacobs, Athene, February 2003.
  4. "An Historical Perspective on Being Vegetarian.", by Indira Nathan, Frances Robinson, Lynne Burgess, and Allan Hackett, Centre for Consumer Education and Research, Liverpool John Moores University. Amended 20 January 2004
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Peter Marshall, Nature's Web : An Exploration Of Ecological Thinking. London : Simon & Schuster, 1992. ISBN 0671710656. (p. 255)

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