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P. F. Strawson
'Sir Peter Frederick Strawson' (
November 23 1919 –
13 February 2006) was an
English philosopher. He was the
Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy at the
University of Oxford (
Magdalen College) from 1968 to 1987. Before that he was appointed as a college lecturer at
University College, Oxford in 1947 and became a tutorial fellow the following year until 1968. On his retirement in 1987, he returned to the college and continued working there until shortly before his death.
Life and work
Born in
Ealing, West
London, Peter Strawson was brought up in
Finchley, North London, by his parents, both of whom were teachers. He was educated at Christ's College, Finchley, followed by
St John's College, Oxford, where he read
Philosophy, Politics, and Economics.
Strawson first became well known with his article "On Referring" (1950), a criticism of
Bertrand Russell's
Theory of Descriptions (see also
Definite descriptions). He was largely responsible for establishing
metaphysics as a worthwhile direction in
analytic philosophy.
In philosophical methodology, there are (at least) two important and interrelated features of Strawson's work that are worthy of note. The first is the project of a
descriptive metaphysics, and the second is his notion of a shared conceptual scheme, composed of concepts operated willy nilly in everyday life (but, obviously, without the philosopher's reflective awareness). In his book ''Individuals'', Strawson attempts to give a description of various concepts that form an interconnected web, representing (part of) our common, shared, human conceptual scheme. In particular, he examines our conceptions of basic particulars, and how they are variously brought under general spatio-temporal concepts. What makes this a metaphysical project is that it exhibits, in fine detail, the structural features of our thought about the world, and thus precisely delimits how we, humans, think about reality.
Peter Strawson was made a Fellow of the
British Academy in 1960, and Foreign Honorary Member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1971. He was president of the
Aristotelian Society from 1969 to 1970. He was
knighted in 1977, for services to philosophy.
His son,
Galen Strawson, is also a philosopher.
Strawson died in hospital on
13 February 2006 after a short illness.
Partial bibliography
Books
★ ''Introduction to Logical Theory''. London:
Methuen, 1952.
★ ''Individuals: An Essay in Descriptive Metaphysics''. London: Methuen, 1959.
★ ''
The Bounds of Sense: An Essay on Kant's Critique of Pure Reason''. London: Methuen, 1966.
★ ''Logico-Linguistic Papers''. London: Methuen, 1971
★ ''Freedom and Resentment and other Essays''. London: Methuen, 1974
★ ''Subject and Predicate in Logic and Grammar''. London: Methuen, 1974
★ ''Skepticism and Naturalism: Some Varieties''. New York: Columbia University Press, 1985.
★ ''Analysis and Metaphysics: An Introduction to Philosophy''. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1992.
★ ''Entity and Identity''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Articles
★ "Truth" (''Analysis'', 1949)
★ "Truth" (''
Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society'' suppl. vol. xxiv, 1950)
★ "On Referring" (''
Mind'', 1950)
★ "In Defence of a Dogma" with
H. P. Grice (''
Philosophical Review'', 1956)
★ "Logical Subjects and Physical Objects" (''
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'', 1957)
★ "Singular Terms and Predication" (''
Journal of Philosophy'', 1961)
★ "Universals" (''
Midwest Studies in Philosophy'', 1979)
References
★ ''The Philosophy of P. F. Strawson'', Louis Hahn, ed. (Open Court, 1998)
★ ''Theories of Truth'', Richard Kirkham (
MIT Press, 1992). (Chapter 10 contains a detailed discussion of Strawson's performative theory of truth.)
★ Sir Peter Strawson (1919–2006), ''Univ Newsletter'', Issue 23, page 4, Hilary 2006.
External links
★
''Freedom and resentment''. Full text of his 1962 article.
★
Obituary — ''
The Times''
★
Obituary — ''
The Guardian''
★
''Peter F. Strawson: Analysis and Metaphysics''. Roundtable on Strawson in Lima, Peru