Thursday, May 29, 2008

Confucius


(Chinese philosopher, 551–479 B.C.) Confucius promoted the general observance of li (rites, norms of conduct established over time), while advocating a sensible attitude that recognised the importance of adapting tradition to context. Confucian ethics holds ren (goodness, humanity) to be the highest ideal.

Lao Tzu



(Chinese philosopher, c. 6th century B.C.). Also known as Lao Tzu, Loazi is thought to be a contemporary of Confucius and credited with writing the Daodejing (also Tao Te Ching).

Mao Zedong


(Chinese revolutionary, political leader and Marxist political theorist, 1893-1976). Mao Zedong was the main political leader of the Chinese Revolution, the first head of the People's Republic of China, and the principal theorist of "Mao Zedong Thought" or "Maoism", a contemporary development of revolutionary Marxist theory. Mao's writings deal with topics as broad as art and literature, organizational questions, and military strategy and tactics, in addition to philosophical matters. Mao drew heavily from Lenin's Philosophical Notebooks on Hegel in writing his main work on dialectical materialism, On Contradiction, and its companion text on Marxist epistemology, On Practice. Mao also wrote a considerable amount on issues of political philosophy, elaborating on and developing Marx and Lenin's theories of class dictatorship and democracy in works such as On New Democracy and On the Correct Handling of Contradictions Among the People. Mao's "official" Selected Works run into five heavy volumes. While he remains a controversial figure, Mao is having a considerable impact on contemporary philosophy, notably through his influence on Louis Althusser, Alain Badiou, and others, including Slavoj Žižek, who recently edited a collection of his philosophical writings under the title On Practice and Contradiction (Verso, 2007).

Mencius


Mencius a.k.a. Meng-tzu, Meng K’o, (Chinese Confucian philosopher c. 379–272 B.C.). Most notable for his assertion of the innate goodness of human nature.

John Rogers Searle


(American philosopher, 1932–). Searle is a prominent and often controversial contributor to philosophy of language and philosophy of mind; he is also noted for the account of social reality he gives in The Construction of Social Reality (1997). Searle's books are written in a clear, conversational style, a factor that contributes to his wide readership among lay-people. His early work was in speech act theory, where he elaborated and contributed new elements to John Austin's work in the field. Searle's philosophy of mind comprises three major components: a critique of computationalism and strong AI (the "Chinese Room Argument"), a theory of intentionality, and a theory of consciousness. Searle believes consciousness to be defined by first-person subjective experience, and thus irreducible to third-person objective description (based on neural states, for example); to attempt such a description is to immediately jettison the subject under consideration (consciousness). Searle also supposes consciousness to be an emergent property of brain processes and a function of brain biology. Searle's books include Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind (1983), The Rediscovery of the Mind (1992), The Mystery of Consciousness (1997), Rationality in Action (2001), and Mind: A Brief Introduction (2004).

Xún Zǐ


Xún Zǐ or Hsün Tzu (荀子; Chinese Confucian philosopher, c.310–237 B.C.). Xún Zǐ is best known for his opposition to Mencius’s view of the inherent goodness of human nature. For Xún Zǐ, rules of proper behaviour function to counter the corrupt desires and motivations of individuals.

Zhu Xi


Zhu Xi or Chu Hsi (Chinese Neo-Confucian philosopher, Song Dynasty, 1130–1200). Considered the greatest of the Neo-Confucian scholars, Zhu Xi’s thought initially represented a challenge to orthodox Neo-Confucianism. His commentaries on "The Four Books", however, would eventually form the basis for all civil service examinations conducted in China for the next 400 years, until that system was abolished in 1905.

Zhuangzi


Zhuangzi (莊子) or Chuang Tzu (Chinese Taoist philosopher, c. 4th century B.C., Waring States Period). Author of the seven "inner chapters" of the text Zhuangzi. Zhuangzi’s teaching that there is no neutral ground from which to adjudicate judgements between opposing positions makes his philosophy something of a precursor to relativism.

Edith Stein


(German philosopher, Carmelite nun, martyr, and saint of the Catholic Church, 1891–1942). Stein studied under two of the great minds of phenomenology, Edmund Husserl and Max Scheler. In 1922 she converted to Christianity, eventually becoming a Carmelite nun. This failed to shield her from Nazi persecution, however, and she died in Auschwitz in 1942. She was canonized as Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross by Pope John Paul II (who, interestingly, wrote his doctoral thesis on the phenomenological work of Max Scheler). Perhaps her major philosophical work is Finite and Eternal Being: An Attempt to an Ascent to the Meaning of Being, which attempts a synthesis of phenomenology and the philosophy of Saint Thomas Aquinas.

Martin Luther


(German theologian and leader of the Protestant reformation, 1483–1546). Martin Luther was an Augustinian friar from Saxony, schooled in philosophy and biblical languages. The texts that express Luther's dissatisfaction with Catholic doctrine are the 95 Theses, Appeal to the Nobility, The Babylonian Captivity of the Church, and The Freedom of a Christian Man, all of which prompted his excommunication by the Pope. Luther proclaimed justification by faith alone and the priesthood of all believers, unmediated by the Church. His translation of the Bible into German helped to shape the German language and had an influence on the English authors of the King James Bible.

Jacques Maritain


(French Catholic philosopher, 1882–1973). In a state of metaphysical despair over the spiritual vacuum at the heart of French intellectual life, dominated as it was at the time by scientism, the young Maritain entered a suicide pact with his fiancée. It was Henri Bergson's vitalistic philosophy and critique of positivism that injected sufficient meaning into the lives of the couple for them to abandon their contract before it matured. Maritain went on to become one of the central figures of Neo-Thomism. His innovative interpretation of Aquinas's philosophy formed a central plank in the defence of Catholic doctrine against modernist attackers. Maritain also wrote on aesthetics (e.g. Art and Scholasticism, 1920), epistemology, metaphysics and theology (Distinguish to Unite: or, The Degrees of Knowledge, 1932), and political philosophy (Man and the State, 1961). He was also instrumental in drafting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Karl Rahner


(German theologian, 1904–1984). Rahner's theology influenced the Second Vatican Council (Vatican II) and is now central for modern Catholicism. He is the author of Foundations of Christian Faith.

Max Scheler


(German phenomenologist, social philosopher, and sociologist of knowledge). Scheler was born in Munich, studied in Jena, and came into contact with phenomenology upon his return to Munich in 1907. He was acquainted with both Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, though he was not altogether uncritical of their work. Upon his conversion to Catholicism after World War I, he began phenomenological analyses of religious phenomena and feelings, and later turned his attention to anthropology and natural science. At the core of Scheler’s philosophy is his theory of the essential and objective, though non-Platonic, nature of values.

Julian of Norwich


(English Christian theologian and mystic, c. 1342–c. 1416). Considered one of the greatest English mystics and adored by the Catholic and Reformed churches alike, Julian wrote in-depth theoretical accounts of sixteen visions she experienced toward the end of a severe, almost fatal illness. The Sixteen Revelations of Divine Love (c. 1393) is believed to be the first book written by a woman in the English language. Julian's theology is discordantly optimistic for her time; her language references metaphors of domesticity and motherhood in describing a God who is universally loving and compassionate rather than punitive.

Peter Thomas Geach


(British philosopher, 1916–). Geach has made major contributions to philosophical logic, the theory of identity, philosophy of religion and history of philosophy. He is well known for his 1960 essay, "Ascriptivism", in which he refutes H. L. A. Hart's "ascriptivism" (the notion that to call an action voluntary is to express a commitment to hold the agent of the action responsible for it, rather than to describe the action as in some way caused by the agent), and for discrediting the notion of "distribution" in logic (Reference and Generality, 1968). Geach's Catholicism is central to his philosophy, and he is sometimes credited as the founder of Analytical Thomism.

Saint Bonaventure of Bagnoregio


(San Bonaventura) (Italian theologian, 1221–1274). Medieval scholastic theologian and philosopher, a contemporary of Thomas Aquinas, and a Cardinal Bishop of Albano. He was canonised by the Catholic Church and made a doctor of the church in 1588. Bonaventure wrote extensively on the connection between philosophy and theology, developing the view that "all divisions of knowledge are handmaids of theology." His major writings include a four-volume Commentary on the Sentences of Lombard, Commentary on the Gospel of St. Luke, De Reductione Artium ad Theologiam ("On the Reduction of the Arts to Theology"), and Itinerarium Mentis ad Deum ("The Mind's Journey Unto God").

G. E. M. Anscombe


(English philosopher, 1919–2001). Anscombe studied under Ludwig Wittgenstein; she became his close friend and a leading authority on his work. She is the author of Intention and "An Introduction to Wittgenstein’s Tractatus". In her essay "Modern Moral Philosophy", Anscombe coined the term "consequentialism" to distinguish modern English moral philosophy from earlier forms of utilitarianism. She was also a political activist and a devout Catholic.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Acharya Nāgārjuna


(Indian Mahayana Buddhist philosopher, fl. second century A.D.). Founder of the Madhyamaka View. Author of the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā (Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way).

Siddhārtha Gautama Buddha


(Spiritual teacher and historical founder of Buddhism, c. 563–483 B.C.). Siddhārtha Gautama taught that desire or craving, born of ignorance, is the cause of suffering. Desire and suffering may be overcome by following the Eightfold Path (rightness of speech, action, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, concentration, thought, and intentions), and accepting the following claims: all existence is unsatisfactory; all existence is impermanent; and there is no permanent self.

Bodhidharma


Bodhidharma or Da Mo (Buddhist monk credited with introducing Zen Buddhism to China, fl. A.D. 526/527). Displeased with his lack of progress in Southern China, Bodhidharma is said to have spent the last nine years of his life seated and silent, his gaze fixed upon a wall inside a cave near the Shaolin Monastery.

Ludwig Wittgenstein


(Austrian-born philosopher, 1889–1951). Wittgenstein was a central figure for the development of British analytic and ordinary language philosophy, though some elements of his thought situate him uneasily within that tradition. A distinction is commonly made (not least by Wittgenstein himself) between the austere, early Wittgenstein of the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, whose picture theory of meaning has it strictly as a function of propositional logic, and the later Wittgenstein of the posthumously published Philosophical Investigations, who famously proposed "meaning is use". More recent scholarship has tended to emphasize the continuity of Wittgenstein's thought, particularly with reference to his view of the essentially "therapeutic" nature of philosophy, and the implied ethics held to be consistent across his philosophical work. Wittgenstein kept extensive philosophical notes that have led to several posthumously published works, such as the Blue and Brown Books, Philosophical Grammar, Philosophical Remarks, and On Certainty.

Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy


(Russian writer and philosopher, 1828–1910). Acclaimed as perhaps the greatest of all novelists, Tolstoy was also a respectable moral philosopher. Alongside such novels as War and Peace and Anna Kerenina, Tolstoy wrote A Confession, What is Art?, and his non-fiction magnum opus, The Kingdom of God Is Within You, a work that endures as a blueprint for Christian anarchism and philosophies of "non-resistance", and which profoundly affected the young Mohandas Gandhi, inspiring him to take his first steps down the path of non-violent and successful resistance to colonial British rule in India.

Mary Wollstonecraft


(British philosopher, writer and feminist, 1759–1797). Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Women.

Bernard Arthur Owen Williams


(British philosopher, 1929–2003). One of the most important moral philosophers of the twentieth century, Williams was a non-foundationalist and anti-reductionist thinker who believed that the complexity of moral experience made it impenetrable to systematic codification. He rejected utilitarianism out of hand, and criticized Kantian ethics and the categorical imperative for failing to make allowance for the specific identities and situations of individuals confronting moral choices. His books include Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy, Moral Luck, Problems of the Self, and Shame and Necessity.

Gilbert Ryle


(English philosopher, 1900–1976). Ryle was a noted representative of the British school of ordinary language philosophy inspired by Wittgenstein. He is best known for The Concept of Mind, an influential work in which Ryle mounts a critique of Cartesian dualism, for which he coined the phrase "the ghost in the machine". Ryle denied the existence of internal mental states and believed that subjectivity and individuality could be richly inferred and described from the evidence of a person's behaviour, without recourse to any super-sensory realm of consciousness or the soul.

Bertrand Russell



(1872–1970). The quintessential British philosopher, Russel was a master of logic, a social reformer and a man of letters. He was the founder of a philosophical system for which he coined the term logical atomism, and an early advocate of logicism (the idea that all of mathematics can be derived from pure logic).

George Edward Moore


(English philosopher, 1873–1985). Alongside Russell, Wittgenstein and Frege, G. E. Moore is a seminal figure for the Analytic tradition in philosophy. Moore broke with the idealism dominant among British philosophers during the early part of the twentieth century, and he is well known for his defence of common sense in philosophical analysis. His "Here is a hand" argument against philosophical scepticism, in which he held up one hand, and then another, and then concluded that there were at least two external objects of which he had knowledge and that therefore an external world exists, is understandably famous, and for some philosophers, infamous. Moore is also known for "Moore's paradox"; the paradox concerns the supposed impossibility of a person consistently holding to statements such as "It will rain but I don't believe it will", which are nevertheless not logically inconsistent and commonly asserted. Both the paradox and the "Here is a hand" argument were serious preoccupations for Wittgenstein, who thought the paradox to be Moore's greatest contribution to philosophical discourse. Moore is the author of Principia Ethica, "A Defence of Common Sense", "The Refutation of Idealism" and "A Proof of the External World".

John Stuart Mill

(British empiricist, 1806–1873). Utilitarian social reformer and early advocate of equal rights for women.

David Hume


(Scottish neo-skeptical philosopher and historian, 1711–1776). Hume's complex and influential body of work situates him as one of the most important philosophers of the modern age, and a pivotal figure of the Enlightenment. Hume refuted the Seventeenth Century School of rationalistic metaphysics, whose thinkers included Hobbes, Descartes, Leibniz, and Spinoza, rejecting their Euclidian deductive method of reasoning. Instead, he followed in the footsteps of the British Empiricist School, whose pronounced scepticism he greatly admired, to produce an innovative philosophy.

Peter Thomas Geach



(British philosopher, 1916–). Geach has made major contributions to philosophical logic, the theory of identity, philosophy of religion and history of philosophy. He is well known for his 1960 essay, "Ascriptivism", in which he refutes H. L. A. Hart's "ascriptivism" (the notion that to call an action voluntary is to express a commitment to hold the agent of the action responsible for it, rather than to describe the action as in some way caused by the agent), and for discrediting the notion of "distribution" in logic (Reference and Generality, 1968). Geach's Catholicism is central to his philosophy, and he is sometimes credited as the founder of Analytical Thomism.

Mahatma Gandhi



(Indian political and spiritual leader and activist, 1869–1948). The successful application of Gandhi’s theory of Satyagraha (strictly non-violent resistance to tyranny through mass civil disobedience) led India to independence from British colonial rule. Major influences on Gandhi’s thought included the Bhagavad Gita, The Sermon on the Mount, Tolstoy, Ruskin, Emerson and Thoreau.

Philippa Ruth Foot


(British moral philosopher, 1920–) is one of the founders of contemporary virtue ethics and a consistent critic of utilitarian and other forms of consequentialist ethics. Foot has been crucial for the reemergence of normative ethics within analytic philosophy, and discussion of her so-called "trolley problem" (i.e., a trolley hurtles along a track threatening to kill five people who have been tied to the track by a mad philosopher; the only way to save them is by pulling a lever that will divert the trolley onto a different track to which only one person has been tied--should you pull the lever saving five but killing one?) is ongoing. Foot's major publications include Virtues and Vices and Other Essays in Moral Philosophy (1978), Natural Goodness (2001), and Moral Dilemmas: And Other Topics in Moral Philosophy (2002).

Sir Michael Anthony Eardley Dummett


Leading British analytic philosopher, 1925–); contends that arguments between realists and non-realists reduce to differing notions of truth.

Clinton Richard Dawkins


(British evolutionary biologist and ethologist, popular writer on science and religion, 1941–). Apart from his major contributions to the field of evolutionary biology (The Selfish Gene (1976); The Extended Phenotype (1982)), Dawkins is also widely known for his forthright anti-religious views, the expression of which culminated in 2006 with the publication of The God Delusion.

Robin George (R.G.) Collingwood


Collingwood (British philosopher and Archeaologist, 1889-1943). Professor of Metaphysics at Pembroke College, Oxford University. Collingwood wrote widely on many areas of philosophy and is best known for his books The Idea of History (posthumous) and The Principles of Art (1938). The central theme of Collingwood's philosophy of history is the view that the history practiced by historians is primarily a study of the minds of the historical agents under investigation. Historians cannot understand their subjects from an external objective perspective, but must strive to think the thoughts of those they study. Collingwood was also influential in aesthetics where he developed Croce's view that artworks are fundamentally expressions of emotion. He argued that although art was expressive by nature it could serve epistemological, metaphysical and social functions. Other major writings include: Speculum Mentis, Metaphysics, and Philosophical Method. (Anonymous contributor)

Francis Herbert Bradley


(English philosopher, 1846–1924). Bradley was acclaimed as the greatest British idealist since Berkeley. Not long after his death, however, his idealism became the primary target for those leading the analytic revolution in Anglo philosophy, most notably the philosophers G. E. Moore, Bertrand Russell and A. J. Ayer. Bradley's major titles include Ethical Studies, The Principles of Logic and Appearance and Reality.

Sir Isaiah Berlin


(Latvian-born British philosopher, historian of ideas, and political theorist, 1909–1997). Author of the influential essay, "Two Concepts of Liberty".

Jeremy Bentham


(British philosopher and utilitarian legal reformer, 1748–1832). Bentham advocated a hedonistic utilitarian calculus in which an action is correct if it augments the pleasure of those affected. Pleasure, he said, is the only good and pain the only evil. He is the author of An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, and the inventor of the panopticon (never built), a circular prison in the middle of which stands a circular surveillance tower that affords a view into each of the prison cells; the guards in the tower remain invisible to the prisoners, who never know whether they are being observed or not.

Alfred Jules Ayer


(British philosopher and one of the foremost proponents of logical positivism, 1910–1989); author of Language, Truth and Logic.

John Langshaw Austin



usually J. L. Austin (British philosopher, 1911–1960). Austin is best known as an influential linguistic philosopher whose work of the 1950s paved the way for speech act theory. He is the author of How to Do Things With Words and the posthumously published Sense and Sensibilia, a volume compiled from lecture notes that represents a pointed attack on sense-data theories of perception; in particular, A. J. Ayer comes under heavy fire for his failure to consider how such words as "know", "exist" and "real" are employed in daily life.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Ayn Rand


(Russian-born American philosopher and novelist, 1905–1982). Author of The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged; founder of Objectivism.

Susan Sontag


(born Jan. 16, 1933, New York, N.Y., U.S. — died Dec. 28, 2004, New York) U.S. writer. She studied at the University of Chicago and Harvard University and taught philosophy at several institutions. In the early 1960s she began contributing to such periodicals as the New York Review of Books, Commentary, and Partisan Review, her French-influenced essays being characterized by a serious philosophical approach to aspects of modern culture rarely taken seriously at the time, including films, popular music, and "camp" sensibility. Collections of her essays include the influential Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (1966) and Styles of Radical Will (1969). Her later critical works include On Photography (1977), Illness as Metaphor (1978), and AIDS and Its Metaphors (1989). She also wrote screenplays and novels, including The Volcano Lover (1992) and In America (2000).

Cornel Ronald West



(American philosopher and public intellectual, 1953–). A provocative and charismatic public speaker, West cites the African American Baptist Church, Marxism, pragmatism, transcendentalism, and Anton Chekhov as influences. He self-identifies as a democratic socialist rather than a Marxist, mainly due to Marx's anti-religious views. Underpinning much of West's thought is the belief that white supremacy continues to define everyday life in America, and that this creates many "degraded and oppressed people hungry for identity, meaning, and self-worth." He has authored and co-authored many books, including Black Theology and Marxist Thought (1979), Prophesy Deliverance! An Afro-American Revolutionary Christianity (1982), The American Evasion of Philosophy: A Genealogy of Pragmatism (1989), The Ethical Dimensions of Marxist Thought (1991), Race Matters (1993), and Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight Against Imperialism (2004).

Thorstein Bunde Veblen


(Norwegian-American sociologist and economist, 1857–1929). Veblen was the founder, along with John R. Commons, of the Institutional economics movement. He is most famous for his book The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899), a satirical critique of the American economy in which the now conspicuous concepts of "conspicuous consumption", "conspicuous leisure" and "conspicuous waste" were introduced. Unlike the neoclassical economics that was emerging at the same time, Veblen described economic behavior as socially rather than individually determined and saw economic organization as a process of ongoing evolution.

Paul Johannes Tillich


(German-born American theologian and philosopher, 1886–1965). Tillich was one of the most influential Protestant theologians of the twentieth century, particularly after World War II. A popular speaker and preacher, Tillich is best known for his "method of correlation", a systematic theology that sought fresh Christian answers to the deep existential questions of the age. He is the author of The Protestant Era, Systematic Theology (three volumes), The Courage to Be, and Dynamics of Faith.

Henry David Thoreau



(American naturalist and writer, author of "Resistance to Civil Government", 1817–1862).

Alfred Tarski


(Polish-born American logician, mathematician, and philosopher of logic, 1902–1983). Author of Logic, Semantics, Metamathematics. Tarski is famous for his investigations, conducted in the 1930s while still in Poland, into the notions of truth and consequence, the results of which profoundly influenced later analytic philosophy.

Leo Strauss


(German-born Jewish-American political philosopher; 1899–1973). Strauss asserted that political philosophy began with the execution of Socrates by the State.

Wilfrid Stalker Sellars


(American philosopher, 1912–1989). One of the great systematic philosophers of his generation; author of Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind (in which he concludes that classical empiricism is a myth) and Philosophy and the Scientific Image of Man.

John Rogers Searle


(American philosopher, 1932–). Searle is a prominent and often controversial contributor to philosophy of language and philosophy of mind; he is also noted for the account of social reality he gives in The Construction of Social Reality (1997). Searle's books are written in a clear, conversational style, a factor that contributes to his wide readership among lay-people. His early work was in speech act theory, where he elaborated and contributed new elements to John Austin's work in the field. Searle's philosophy of mind comprises three major components: a critique of computationalism and strong AI (the "Chinese Room Argument"), a theory of intentionality, and a theory of consciousness. Searle believes consciousness to be defined by first-person subjective experience, and thus irreducible to third-person objective description (based on neural states, for example); to attempt such a description is to immediately jettison the subject under consideration (consciousness). Searle also supposes consciousness to be an emergent property of brain processes and a function of brain biology. Searle's books include Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind (1983), The Rediscovery of the Mind (1992), The Mystery of Consciousness (1997), Rationality in Action (2001), and Mind: A Brief Introduction (2004).