Philosophers
Mortimer Adler Rogers Albritton Alexander of Aphrodisias Samuel Alexander William Alston Anaximander G.E.M.Anscombe Anselm Louise Antony Thomas Aquinas Aristotle David Armstrong Harald Atmanspacher Robert Audi Augustine J.L.Austin A.J.Ayer Alexander Bain Mark Balaguer Jeffrey Barrett William Barrett William Belsham Henri Bergson George Berkeley Isaiah Berlin Richard J. Bernstein Bernard Berofsky Robert Bishop Max Black Susanne Bobzien Emil du Bois-Reymond Hilary Bok Laurence BonJour George Boole Émile Boutroux Daniel Boyd F.H.Bradley C.D.Broad Michael Burke Jeremy Butterfield Lawrence Cahoone C.A.Campbell Joseph Keim Campbell Rudolf Carnap Carneades Nancy Cartwright Gregg Caruso Ernst Cassirer David Chalmers Roderick Chisholm Chrysippus Cicero Tom Clark Randolph Clarke Samuel Clarke Anthony Collins Antonella Corradini Diodorus Cronus Jonathan Dancy Donald Davidson Mario De Caro Democritus Daniel Dennett Jacques Derrida René Descartes Richard Double Fred Dretske John Dupré John Earman Laura Waddell Ekstrom Epictetus Epicurus Austin Farrer Herbert Feigl Arthur Fine John Martin Fischer Frederic Fitch Owen Flanagan Luciano Floridi Philippa Foot Alfred Fouilleé Harry Frankfurt Richard L. Franklin Bas van Fraassen Michael Frede Gottlob Frege Peter Geach Edmund Gettier Carl Ginet Alvin Goldman Gorgias Nicholas St. John Green H.Paul Grice Ian Hacking Ishtiyaque Haji Stuart Hampshire W.F.R.Hardie Sam Harris William Hasker R.M.Hare Georg W.F. Hegel Martin Heidegger Heraclitus R.E.Hobart Thomas Hobbes David Hodgson Shadsworth Hodgson Baron d'Holbach Ted Honderich Pamela Huby David Hume Ferenc Huoranszki Frank Jackson William James Lord Kames Robert Kane Immanuel Kant Tomis Kapitan Walter Kaufmann Jaegwon Kim William King Hilary Kornblith Christine Korsgaard Saul Kripke Thomas Kuhn Andrea Lavazza Christoph Lehner Keith Lehrer Gottfried Leibniz Jules Lequyer Leucippus Michael Levin Joseph Levine George Henry Lewes C.I.Lewis David Lewis Peter Lipton C. Lloyd Morgan John Locke Michael Lockwood Arthur O. Lovejoy E. Jonathan Lowe John R. Lucas Lucretius Alasdair MacIntyre Ruth Barcan Marcus Tim Maudlin James Martineau Nicholas Maxwell Storrs McCall Hugh McCann Colin McGinn Michael McKenna Brian McLaughlin John McTaggart Paul E. Meehl Uwe Meixner Alfred Mele Trenton Merricks John Stuart Mill Dickinson Miller G.E.Moore Thomas Nagel Otto Neurath Friedrich Nietzsche John Norton P.H.Nowell-Smith Robert Nozick William of Ockham Timothy O'Connor Parmenides David F. Pears Charles Sanders Peirce Derk Pereboom Steven Pinker U.T.Place Plato Karl Popper Porphyry Huw Price H.A.Prichard Protagoras Hilary Putnam Willard van Orman Quine Frank Ramsey Ayn Rand Michael Rea Thomas Reid Charles Renouvier Nicholas Rescher C.W.Rietdijk Richard Rorty Josiah Royce Bertrand Russell Paul Russell Gilbert Ryle Jean-Paul Sartre Kenneth Sayre T.M.Scanlon Moritz Schlick John Duns Scotus Arthur Schopenhauer John Searle Wilfrid Sellars David Shiang Alan Sidelle Ted Sider Henry Sidgwick Walter Sinnott-Armstrong Peter Slezak J.J.C.Smart Saul Smilansky Michael Smith Baruch Spinoza L. Susan Stebbing Isabelle Stengers George F. Stout Galen Strawson Peter Strawson Eleonore Stump Francisco Suárez Richard Taylor Kevin Timpe Mark Twain Peter Unger Peter van Inwagen Manuel Vargas John Venn Kadri Vihvelin Voltaire G.H. von Wright David Foster Wallace R. Jay Wallace W.G.Ward Ted Warfield Roy Weatherford C.F. von Weizsäcker William Whewell Alfred North Whitehead David Widerker David Wiggins Bernard Williams Timothy Williamson Ludwig Wittgenstein Susan Wolf Scientists David Albert Michael Arbib Walter Baade Bernard Baars Jeffrey Bada Leslie Ballentine Marcello Barbieri Gregory Bateson Horace Barlow John S. Bell Mara Beller Charles Bennett Ludwig von Bertalanffy Susan Blackmore Margaret Boden David Bohm Niels Bohr Ludwig Boltzmann Emile Borel Max Born Satyendra Nath Bose Walther Bothe Jean Bricmont Hans Briegel Leon Brillouin Stephen Brush Henry Thomas Buckle S. H. Burbury Melvin Calvin Donald Campbell Sadi Carnot Anthony Cashmore Eric Chaisson Gregory Chaitin Jean-Pierre Changeux Rudolf Clausius Arthur Holly Compton John Conway Jerry Coyne John Cramer Francis Crick E. P. Culverwell Antonio Damasio Olivier Darrigol Charles Darwin Richard Dawkins Terrence Deacon Lüder Deecke Richard Dedekind Louis de Broglie Stanislas Dehaene Max Delbrück Abraham de Moivre Bernard d'Espagnat Paul Dirac Hans Driesch John Eccles Arthur Stanley Eddington Gerald Edelman Paul Ehrenfest Manfred Eigen Albert Einstein George F. R. Ellis Hugh Everett, III Franz Exner Richard Feynman R. A. Fisher David Foster Joseph Fourier Philipp Frank Steven Frautschi Edward Fredkin Augustin-Jean Fresnel Benjamin Gal-Or Howard Gardner Lila Gatlin Michael Gazzaniga Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen GianCarlo Ghirardi J. Willard Gibbs James J. Gibson Nicolas Gisin Paul Glimcher Thomas Gold A. O. Gomes Brian Goodwin Joshua Greene Dirk ter Haar Jacques Hadamard Mark Hadley Patrick Haggard J. B. S. Haldane Stuart Hameroff Augustin Hamon Sam Harris Ralph Hartley Hyman Hartman Jeff Hawkins John-Dylan Haynes Donald Hebb Martin Heisenberg Werner Heisenberg John Herschel Basil Hiley Art Hobson Jesper Hoffmeyer Don Howard John H. Jackson William Stanley Jevons Roman Jakobson E. T. Jaynes Pascual Jordan Eric Kandel Ruth E. Kastner Stuart Kauffman Martin J. Klein William R. Klemm Christof Koch Simon Kochen Hans Kornhuber Stephen Kosslyn Daniel Koshland Ladislav Kovàč Leopold Kronecker Rolf Landauer Alfred Landé Pierre-Simon Laplace Karl Lashley David Layzer Joseph LeDoux Gerald Lettvin Gilbert Lewis Benjamin Libet David Lindley Seth Lloyd Werner Loewenstein Hendrik Lorentz Josef Loschmidt Alfred Lotka Ernst Mach Donald MacKay Henry Margenau Owen Maroney David Marr Humberto Maturana James Clerk Maxwell Ernst Mayr John McCarthy Warren McCulloch N. David Mermin George Miller Stanley Miller Ulrich Mohrhoff Jacques Monod Vernon Mountcastle Emmy Noether Donald Norman Travis Norsen Alexander Oparin Abraham Pais Howard Pattee Wolfgang Pauli Massimo Pauri Wilder Penfield Roger Penrose Steven Pinker Colin Pittendrigh Walter Pitts Max Planck Susan Pockett Henri Poincaré Daniel Pollen Ilya Prigogine Hans Primas Zenon Pylyshyn Henry Quastler Adolphe Quételet Pasco Rakic Nicolas Rashevsky Lord Rayleigh Frederick Reif Jürgen Renn Giacomo Rizzolati A.A. Roback Emil Roduner Juan Roederer Jerome Rothstein David Ruelle David Rumelhart Robert Sapolsky Tilman Sauer Ferdinand de Saussure Jürgen Schmidhuber Erwin Schrödinger Aaron Schurger Sebastian Seung Thomas Sebeok Franco Selleri Claude Shannon Charles Sherrington Abner Shimony Herbert Simon Dean Keith Simonton Edmund Sinnott B. F. Skinner Lee Smolin Ray Solomonoff Roger Sperry John Stachel Henry Stapp Tom Stonier Antoine Suarez Leo Szilard Max Tegmark Teilhard de Chardin Libb Thims William Thomson (Kelvin) Richard Tolman Giulio Tononi Peter Tse Alan Turing C. S. Unnikrishnan Nico van Kampen Francisco Varela Vlatko Vedral Vladimir Vernadsky Mikhail Volkenstein Heinz von Foerster Richard von Mises John von Neumann Jakob von Uexküll C. H. Waddington John B. Watson Daniel Wegner Steven Weinberg Paul A. Weiss Herman Weyl John Wheeler Jeffrey Wicken Wilhelm Wien Norbert Wiener Eugene Wigner E. O. Wilson Günther Witzany Stephen Wolfram H. Dieter Zeh Semir Zeki Ernst Zermelo Wojciech Zurek Konrad Zuse Fritz Zwicky Presentations Biosemiotics Free Will Mental Causation James Symposium |
David F. Pears
David Pears was a member of the ordinary language philosophy group at Oxford University in the early 1950's and 1960's. With Peter F. Strawson, and Mary and Geoffrey J. Warnock, while he was still a student at Christ Church, Oxford, Pears organized a series of group discussions for the BBC Radio Third Programme. One of these, "Freedom and the Will," captured the state of the free-will debates in English philosophy just before Strawson was to change the subject from the question of free will versus determinism to the problem of moral responsibility with his 1962 essay, "Freedom and Resentment." Bernard Williams wrote an introduction and a postscript to the radio programs, which were edited by Pears as the book, "Freedom and the Will. Pears was perhaps best known for his translation, with Brian McGuiness, of Ludwing Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. For Teachers
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Guardian Obituary
![]() David Pears, who has died aged 87, was an important figure in British philosophy from its heyday in Oxford after the second world war, when ordinary-language philosophy was just beginning to flourish. He helped set the parameters for the study of Ludwig Wittgenstein with his three books and many articles on the philosopher, and also wrote extensively on Bertrand Russell and David Hume, and on topics in the philosophy of mind, metaphysics and philosophy of language. It is less easy to pin a particular set of doctrines on him than on some of his illustrious friends and contemporaries (Peter Strawson, Michael Dummett, Elizabeth Anscombe), but the philosophy of mind would have looked different without him, and arguably, thanks to the self-effacing balance of his approach, he was "the only Wittgensteinian to get Wittgenstein right", as a fellow Wittgensteinian said. A professor at Christ Church, Oxford, Pears held visiting professorships at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), Berkeley, and other American universities. He went to Westminster school, where the philosophers Richard Wollheim and Patrick Gardiner were fellow pupils and became lifelong friends. He was in the Royal Artillery during the war, and was seriously injured in a practice gas attack. On demobilisation, he studied classics at Balliol College, Oxford, and developed an interest in current philosophy thanks to a lucky accident. As he fled the Randolph hotel after being assaulted by a beefy baronet, Pears broke his leg, and, as he was being carried to the ambulance, grabbed a book from a friend to read in hospital. It was Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, which, he said, changed his life, and which he later translated in collaboration with Brian McGuinness, theirs becoming the canonical version. Marked out as brilliant from a young age, he became research lecturer at Christ Church soon after graduating in 1948, and his early papers were included in Antony Flew's collections of cutting-edge linguistic philosophy, but he was strangely diffident, and (at first) always needed a glass of Guinness and two digestive biscuits before giving a lecture. In the 1950s, he, Strawson and Mary and Geoffrey Warnock, all starting out on their philosophical careers, staged a series of debates on what was then the Third Programme, which were later adapted into three books. In the 1960s, he found himself "driven to the conclusion that there must be a causal connection between desire and action, because there seems to be no other theory that fits the phenomenon". Although this line went drastically against the prevalent Wittgensteinian doctrine that reasons cannot be considered causally, it soon became fashionable. Except for the odd mention of Pears, full credit for it has gone to the American philosopher Donald Davidson, who went on fully to develop the causal theory of action. This is characteristic. Pears was not, or never seemed to be, ambitious, apart from his desire to get to grips with problems that interested him, irrespective of glory. He pursued philosophy for its own sake wherever it led him, said a fellow academic, with total "purity of philosophical motive". For him, philosophy was an exciting joint enterprise, and far from being competitive, he loved fostering the work of students and colleagues, sending them congratulatory postcards from wherever he happened to be, although inevitably he had his quarrels too. Perhaps he never quite attained the stature expected of him, being less influential through his writing than through brilliant, witty discussion, and something of an unsung hero. He would rather self-deprecatingly say that he owed his entire intellectual achievement to his extraordinary photographic memory. When his book Ludwig Wittgenstein was published in 1971, Igor Stravinksy wrote to congratulate Pears on the beauty of his writing, which, wrote Bernard Williams, "combines in a very pure form the more conversational and the more formal aspects of analytic philosophy (it is rather reminiscent of a certain kind of 20th-century French music)". For Williams - they had given a fascinating seminar on identity together in the 1950s, which was described as "the high-point of philosophical activity of the time" - Pears's questions and discoveries, which were often "deliberately, and realistically, vague", were "constantly shaped ... by a project of self-understanding". Fascinated by paradox, expert in psychology as well as philosophy, and with an insight and empathy unusual in academic males of the time, Pears wrote brilliantly on the self, self-deception and weakness of will. Philosophers, he complains in Motivated Irrationality (1984), tend to ignore that reason "is a force that is stronger in some people than in others" and "project into ordinary thought and behaviour the rationality of their own analyses of ordinary thought and behaviour", adding, "their prejudice is common among bystanders, who forget what it is like to be a participant". One reason that he loved, and linked, Hume and Wittgenstein was the aspiration he ascribed to each of them of understanding humans as they are, grounded in fleshly reality. "Wittgenstein's case against philosophical theories," he writes in the second volume of The False Prison: A Study of the Development of Wittgenstein's Philosophy (1988), is "that they are postulates of reason", whereas he himself is trying to "make us see how our own linguistic devices work, simply by putting them in their place in our lives ..." It was exhilarating to be taught by Pears. He often took on students whom other dons were wary of, arguing that you could never tell who his students were, since they were not carrying on some line of his, but developing their own interests. Spotting nonsense was his great strength; he was a "balloon-pricker", as one friend said. With his eye for the absurd, and sense of the fantastical, he was life-enhancingly funny and a brilliant raconteur, telling stories in so frank and ingenuous a way that it was hard to tell, and hardly seemed to matter, whether they were true or not. He and Isaiah Berlin seemed to think that the whole point of life was to make one another laugh, said a friend. He knew everyone, and the gossipy part of philosophy was his meat and drink. He believed that he did his best work when in a good mood, and, as visiting professor to UCLA (1979), would drive to the beach each morning and sit by the sea, writing and watching people and dolphins. Passionate and erudite about art, he was influential in setting up the Christ Church Gallery. He and Mary Warnock shared a love of interior decoration, and scoured obscure shops for fabulous materials when given the task of decorating a philosophy hang-out by John Austin, whose famous Saturday mornings in the 1950s they both attended. Before his marriage to Anne Drew in 1963, he and the Warnocks would go on holiday together in Italy, the Warnock children finding him hilarious, and he taking them completely seriously. His own idyllic childhood summer holidays in a house near Salcombe in south Devon (which he tried to recreate for his son and daughter) left him with a love for botany and of studying butterflies and moths. He inherited a butterfly collection from an uncle, which he considerably added to, until, dismayed by seeing the light fade from a moth's eye, he decided not to kill them, but to photograph them instead. He used to dispatch male Emperor moths from his house near Oxford to mate with females in the garden of Patrick and Susan Gardiner, three miles away - and it worked. Skilled at cooking, gardening and carpentry, he was always practical and quick-witted - when he arrived at the scene of a car accident in the High, Oxford's high street, he instantly tore up his shirt into bandages while his philosopher companions merely dithered. Always, perhaps, he was trying to follow the advice of his beloved Hume: "Be a philosopher but, amid your philosophy, be still a man." He is survived by Anne and his children. • David Francis Pears, philosopher, born 8 August 1921; died 1 July 2009 Notes
1. Bibliography
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