
The Harvard Brief John Samuel Harpham, "Intellectual Origins of American Slavery: English Ideas in the Early Modern Atlantic World" (Harvard UP, 2025)
Jan 9, 2026
John Samuel Harpham, an Assistant Professor at the University of Oklahoma and author of "Intellectual Origins of American Slavery," explores the intellectual roots of slavery in the English Atlantic. He contrasts Aristotle’s and Roman law’s views on slavery, revealing how early modern philosophers like Locke justified enslavement. Harpham also delves into how narratives about Africa influenced English practices and perspectives, showing a complex blend of ambivalence and justification behind the Atlantic slave trade.
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Personal Origins Shape The Inquiry
- John Samuel Harpham grew up in New Orleans and was shaped by the city's living legacy of slavery.
- His personal background motivated a focus on how slavery became seen as morally legitimate in early America.
Two Foundational Models Of Slavery
- Early modern English thought had two competing traditions about slavery: Aristotle's natural slavery and the Roman law model of slavery as a human institution.
- Harpham argues early modern thinkers largely followed the Roman model, viewing slavery as arising from social practices like war rather than nature.
Early Modern Philosophers Follow Roman Law
- Grotius, Hobbes, and Pufendorf rejected Aristotle's natural-slavery doctrine and emphasized natural freedom inspired by Roman law.
- They described slavery as arising from consent, punishment, or captivity in war, integrating legal and philosophical accounts.




