Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Stuart Hampshire





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  





Sir Stuart Newton Hampshire FBA (1 October 1914 – 13 June 2004) was an English philosopher, literary critic and university administrator.[1] He was one of the antirationalist Oxford thinkers who gave a new direction to moral and political thought in the post-World War II era.

Stuart Hampshire

Born

Stuart Newton Hampshire


(1914-10-01)1 October 1914
Healing, Lincolnshire, England

Died

13 June 2004(2004-06-13) (aged 89)
Oxford, Oxfordshire, England

Alma mater

Balliol College, Oxford

Era

Contemporary philosophy

Region

Western philosophy

School

Analytic philosophy

Institutions

Princeton University
Stanford University

Doctoral students

Robert Stalnaker

Main interests

Philosophy of mind, moral philosophy, history of philosophy

Biography

edit

Hampshire was born in Healing, Lincolnshire, the son of George Newton Hampshire, a fish merchant in nearby Grimsby.[2] Hampshire was educated at Lockers Park School in Hertfordshire (where he overlapped with Guy Burgess),[3] Repton School and Balliol College, Oxford, where he matriculated as a history scholar. He did not confine himself to history, switching instead to the study of Greats and immersing himself in the study of painting and literature. As was the culture at Balliol, his intellectual development owed more to his gifted contemporaries than to academic tutors. Having taken a first class degree, in 1936 he was elected to a Fellowship of All Souls College, Oxford, where he researched and taught philosophy initially as an adherent of logical positivism. He participated in an informal discussion group with some of the leading philosophers of his day, including J. L. Austin, H. L. A. Hart, and Isaiah Berlin.

In 1940, at the outbreak of World War II he enlisted in the army and was given a commission. Due to his lack of physical aptitude he was seconded to a position in military intelligence near London where he worked with Oxford colleagues such as Gilbert Ryle and Hugh Trevor-Roper. His encounters as interrogator with Nazi officers at the end of the war led to his insistence on the reality of evil.[1]

After the war, he worked for the government before resuming his career in philosophy. From 1947 to 1950, he taught at University College London, and was subsequently a fellow of New College, Oxford. His study Spinoza was first published in 1951. In 1955, he returned to All Souls, as a resident fellow and domestic bursar.

His innovative book Thought and Action (1959) attracted much attention, notably from his Oxford colleague Iris Murdoch.[4] It propounded an intentionalist theory of the philosophy of mind taking account of developments in psychology. Although he considered most continental philosophy vulgar and fraudulent, Hampshire was much influenced by Maurice Merleau-Ponty. He insisted that philosophy of mind "has been distorted by philosophers when they think of persons only as passive observers and not as self-willed agents". In his subsequent books, Hampshire sought to shift moral philosophy from its focus on the logical properties of moral statements to what he considered the crucial question of moral problems as they present themselves to us as practical agents.

In 1960, Stuart Hampshire was elected a member of the British Academy and became Grote Professor of the Philosophy of Mind and Logic at University College London, succeeding A. J. Ayer. His international reputation was growing and from 1963 to 1970 he chaired the department of philosophy at Princeton University to which he had happily escaped from the robust atmosphere of London to which his mandarin style, conveyed in a rather preposterous growling accent, was ill-suited, as Ayer implied in his memoirs. In 1970, he returned to Oxford as Warden of Wadham College, Oxford.[5] Wadham was in the first group of men-only Oxford colleges to admit women in 1974. Hampshire considered his wardenship to be one of his most significant achievements in reviving the fortunes of the college. He was knighted in 1979 and retired from Wadham in 1984, when he accepted a professorship at Stanford University.[6]

His last book, Justice Is Conflict (1999), inaugurated the Princeton Monographs in Philosophy series.

Stuart Hampshire wrote extensively on literature and other topics for The Times Literary Supplement and The New York Review of Books amongst others. He was head of the literary panel of the Arts Council for many years. In 1965–66, he was selected by the UK government to conduct a review of the effectiveness of GCHQ.

He married his first wife, Renée Ayer, the former wife of the philosopher A. J. Ayer, in 1961. She died in 1980, and in 1985 he married Nancy Cartwright, who was then his colleague at Stanford and is now Professor of Philosophy at Durham University and at the University of California, San Diego.

Publications

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b O'Grady, Jane (16 June 2004). "Sir Stuart Hampshire". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  • ^ "Hampshire, Sir Stuart Newton". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/94197. Archived from the original on 11 March 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • ^ Stewart Purvia, Jeff Hulbert, Guy Burgess: The Spy Who Knew Everyone' (Biteback Publishing, 2016, ISBN 1849549133), p.6
  • ^ See Iris Murdoch 'Existentialists and Mystics' (London, Chatto & Windus 1997) A critique of Hampshire emerges most strongly in 'The Idea of Perfection', Yale Review Spring 1964
  • ^ Wardens of Wadhem, Wadham College, Oxford, UK.
  • ^ Hacker, P. M. S. (2005). "Thought and Action: A Tribute to Stuart Hampshire". Philosophy. 80 (312): 177. ISSN 0031-8191 – via JSTOR.
  • edit

    Academic offices

    Preceded by

    Maurice Bowra

    WardenofWadham College, Oxford
    1970–1984

    Succeeded by

    Claus Moser, Baron Moser


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stuart_Hampshire&oldid=1232633793"
     



    Last edited on 4 July 2024, at 19:36  





    Languages

     


    العربية
    Español
    Français
    Italiano
    Nederlands
    Português
     

    Wikipedia


    This page was last edited on 4 July 2024, at 19:36 (UTC).

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Terms of Use

    Desktop