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Bernard Williams

Sir Bernard Arthur Owen Williams, FBA (21 September 1929 – 10 June 2003) was an English moral philosopher. His publications include Problems of the Self (1973), Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy (1985), Shame and Necessity (1993), and Truth and Truthfulness (2002). He was knighted in 1999.

Sir

Bernard Williams
Born
Bernard Arthur Owen Williams

(1929-09-21)21 September 1929
Died10 June 2003(2003-06-10) (aged 73)
Rome, Italy
EducationBalliol College, Oxford
Spouses
  • (m. 1955; div. 1974)
  • Patricia Law Skinner
    (m. 1974)
EraContemporary philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnalytic philosophy, Postanalytic philosophy
Institutions
Academic advisorsGilbert Ryle
Notable studentsMyles Burnyeat, Jonathan Sacks, Martha Nussbaum
Main interests
Ethics
Notable ideas
Internal reasons for action, moral luck, dirty hands

As Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and Deutsch Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, Williams became known for his efforts to reorient the study of moral philosophy to psychology, history, and in particular to the Greeks.[1][2] Described by Colin McGinn as an "analytical philosopher with the soul of a general humanist," he was sceptical about attempts to create a foundation for moral philosophy. Martha Nussbaum wrote that he demanded of philosophy that it "come to terms with, and contain, the difficulty and complexity of human life."[3][4]

Williams was a strong supporter of women in academia; according to Nussbaum, he was "as close to being a feminist as a powerful man of his generation could be."[5] He was also famously sharp in conversation. Gilbert Ryle, one of Williams's mentors at Oxford, said that he "understands what you're going to say better than you understand it yourself, and sees all the possible objections to it, and all the possible answers to all the possible objections, before you've got to the end of your own sentence."[6]

Life edit

Early life and education edit

 
Chigwell School, Epping Forest, Essex

The young Bernard was in perpetual intellectual motion, like a dragonfly hovering above a sea of ideas. Everyone he encountered, every event that occurred were material for his insight and his wit.[7]

Shirley Williams, 2009[8]

Williams was born in Westcliff-on-Sea, a suburb of Southend, Essex, to Hilda Amy Williams, née Day, a personal assistant, and Owen Pasley Denny Williams, chief maintenance surveyor for the Ministry of Works.[9][10] He was educated at Chigwell School, an independent school, where he first discovered philosophy.[11][12] Reading D. H. Lawrence led him to ethics and the problems of the self.[13] In his first book, Morality: An Introduction to Ethics (1972), he quoted with approval Lawrence's advice to "[f]ind your deepest impulse, and follow that."[14]

Awarded a scholarship to Oxford, Williams read Greats (pure Classics followed by Ancient History and philosophy) at Balliol. Among his influences at Oxford were W. S. Watt, Russell Meiggs, R. M. Hare, Elizabeth Anscombe, Eric Dodds, Eduard Fraenkel, David Pears and Gilbert Ryle.[15] He shone in the first part of the course, the pure classics (being particularly fond of writing Latin verses in the style of Ovid) and graduated in 1951 with a congratulatory first in the second part of the course and a prize fellowship at All Souls.[12][16]

After Oxford, Williams spent his two-year national service flying Spitfires in Canada for the Royal Air Force. While on leave in New York, he became close to Shirley Brittain Catlin (born 1930), daughter of the novelist Vera Brittain and the political scientist George Catlin.[11] They had already been friends at Oxford. Catlin had moved to New York to study economics at Columbia University on a Fulbright scholarship.[7]

Williams returned to England to take up his fellowship at All Souls and in 1954 became a fellow at New College, Oxford, a position he held until 1959.[17] He and Catlin continued seeing each other. She began working for the Daily Mirror and sought election as a Labour MP. Williams, also a member of the Labour Party, helped her with the 1954 by-election in Harwich in which she was an unsuccessful candidate.[18][15]

First marriage, London edit

 
Shirley Williams, 2011

Williams and Catlin were married in London in July 1955 at St James's, Spanish Place, near Marylebone High Street, followed by a honeymoon in Lesbos, Greece.[19]

The couple moved into a very basic ground-floor apartment in London, on Clarendon Road, Notting Hill. Given how hard it was to find decent housing, they decided instead to share with Helge Rubinstein and her husband, the literary agent Hilary Rubinstein, who at the time was working for his uncle, Victor Gollancz. In 1955 the four of them bought a four-storey, seven-bedroom house in Phillimore Place, Kensington, for £6,800, a home they lived in together for 14 years.[20] Williams described it as one of the happiest periods of his life.[11]

In 1958, Williams spent a term teaching at the University of Ghana in Legon. When he returned to England in 1959, he was appointed lecturer in philosophy at University College London.[21] In 1961, after four miscarriages in four years, Shirley Williams gave birth to their daughter, Rebecca.[22]

Williams was a visiting professor at Princeton University in 1963,[15] and was appointed Professor of Philosophy at Bedford College, London, in 1964. His wife was elected to parliament that year as the Labour member for Hitchin in Hertfordshire.[23] The Sunday Times described the couple two years later as "the New Left at its most able, most generous, and sometimes most eccentric." Andy Beckett wrote that they "entertained refugees from eastern Europe and politicians from Africa, and drank sherry in noteworthy quantities."[24] Shirley Williams became a junior minister and, in 1971, Shadow Home Secretary. Several newspapers saw her as a future prime minister.[25] She went on to co-found a new centrist party in 1981, the Social Democratic Party; Williams left the Labour Party to join the SDP, although he later returned to Labour.[15]

Cambridge, second marriage edit

 
Williams spent over 20 years at King's College, Cambridge, eight of them as provost.

In 1967, at the age of 38, Williams became the Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of King's College.[17]

According to Jane O'Grady, Williams was central to the decision by King's in 1972 to admit women, one of the first three all-male Oxbridge undergraduate colleges to do so.[26] In both his first and second marriages, he supported his wives in their careers and helped with the children more than was common for men at the time.[5] In the 1970s, when Nussbaum's thesis supervisor, G. E. L. Owen, was harassing female students, and she decided nevertheless to support him, Williams told her, during a walk along the backs at Cambridge: "[Y]ou know, there is a price you are paying for this support and encouragement. Your dignity is being held hostage. You really don't have to put up with this."[27]

Shirley Williams's political career (the House of Commons regularly sat until 10 pm) meant that the couple spent a lot of time apart. They bought a house in Furneux Pelham, Hertfordshire, near the border with south Cambridgeshire, while she lived in Phillimore Place during the week to be close to the Houses of Parliament. Sunday was often the only day they were together.[28][29] The differences in their personal values – he was an atheist, she a Catholic – placed a further strain on their relationship.[n 1] It reached breaking point in 1970 when Williams formed a relationship with Patricia Law Skinner, a commissioning editor for Cambridge University Press and wife of the historian Quentin Skinner.[9][30] She had approached Williams to write the opposing view of utilitarianism for Utilitarianism: For and Against with J. J. C. Smart (1973), and they had fallen in love.[11]

Williams and Skinner began living together in 1971.[15] He obtained a divorce in 1974 (at Shirley Williams' request, the marriage was later annulled).[28][11] Patricia Williams married him that year, and the couple went on to have two sons, Jacob in 1975 and Jonathan in 1980.[9][15] Shirley Williams married the political scientist Richard Neustadt in 1987.[24]

Berkeley and Oxford edit

 
University of California, Berkeley

In 1979 Williams was elected Provost of King's, a position he held until 1987. He spent a semester in 1986 at the University of California, Berkeley as Mills Visiting Professor and in 1988 left England to become Monroe Deutsch Professor of Philosophy there, announcing to the media that he was leaving as part of the "brain drain" of British academics to America. He was also Sather Professor of Classical Literature at Berkeley in 1989; Shame and Necessity (1995) grew out of his six Sather lectures.[17][13]

Williams returned to England in 1990 as White's Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford and fellow of Corpus Christi. His sons had been "at sea" in California, he said, not knowing what was expected of them, and he had been unable to help.[13] He regretted having made his departure from England so public; he had been persuaded to do so to highlight Britain's relatively low academic salaries.[n 2] When he retired in 1996, he took up a fellowship again at All Souls.[11]

Royal commissions, committees edit

 
All Souls College, Oxford

Williams served on several royal commissions and government committees: the Public Schools Commission (1965–1970), drug abuse (1971), gambling (1976–1978), the Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship (1979), and the Commission on Social Justice (1993–1994). "I did all the major vices," he said.[16][31] While on the gambling commission, one of his recommendations, ignored at the time, was for a national lottery.[13] (John Major's government introduced one in 1994.)

Mary Warnock described Williams's report on pornography in 1979, as chair of the Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship, as "agreeable, actually compulsive to read."[32] It relied on a "harm condition" that "no conduct should be suppressed by law unless it can be shown to harm someone," and concluded that so long as children were protected from pornography, adults should be free to read and watch it as they see fit.[33][11][34] The report rejected the view that pornography tends to cause sexual offences.[35] Two cases in particular were highlighted, the Moors Murders and the Cambridge Rapist, where the influence of pornography had been discussed during the trials. The report argued that both cases appeared to be "more consistent with pre-existing traits being reflected both in a choice of reading matter and in the acts committed against others."[36]

Opera edit

Williams enjoyed opera from an early age, particularly Mozart and Wagner. Patricia Williams writes that he attended performances of the Carl Rosa Company and Sadler's Wells as a teenager.[37] In an essay on Wagner, he described having been reduced to a "virtually uncontrollable state" during a performance by Jon Vickers as Tristan at Covent Garden.[38] He served on the board of the English National Opera from 1968 to 1986,[15] and wrote an entry, "The Nature of Opera," for The New Grove Dictionary of Opera.[13][39] A collection of his essays, On Opera, was published posthumously in 2006, edited by Patricia Williams.[40][41]

Honours and death edit

Williams became a member of the Institut international de philosophie in 1969, a fellow of the British Academy in 1971 and an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1983. The following year he was made a syndic of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge and later the chair. In 1993 he was elected to a fellowship of the Royal Society of Arts, and in 1999 he was knighted. Several universities awarded him honorary doctorates, including Yale and Harvard.[15][17]

Williams died of heart failure on 10 June 2003 while on holiday in Rome; he had been diagnosed in 1999 with multiple myeloma, a form of cancer.[15][42] He was survived by his wife, their two sons, and his first child, Rebecca.[16] He was cremated in Rome.[15]

Writing edit

Approach to ethics edit

A. W. Moore writes that Williams' work lies within the analytic tradition, although less typical of it "in its breadth, in its erudition, and above all in its profound humanity":

Although he was never a vigorous apologist for that tradition, he always maintained the standards of clarity and rigour which it prizes, and his work is a model of all that is best in the tradition. It is brilliant, deep, and imaginative. It is also extraordinarily tight. There cannot be many critics of his work who have not thought of some objection to what he says, only to find, on looking for a relevant quotation to turn into a target, that Williams carefully presents his views in a way that precisely anticipates the objection.[42]

Williams did not produce any ethical theory or system; several commentators noted, unfairly in the view of his supporters, that he was largely a critic. Moore writes that Williams was unaffected by this criticism: "He simply refused to allow philosophical system-building to eclipse the subtlety and variety of human ethical experience."[15] He equated ethical theories with "a tidiness, a systematicity, and an economy of ideas," writes Moore, that were not up to describing human lives and motives. Williams tried not to lose touch "with the real concerns that animate our ordinary ethical experience," unlike much of the "arid, ahistorical, second-order" debates about ethics in philosophy departments.[42][43]

In his first book, Morality: An Introduction to Ethics (1972), Williams wrote that whereas "most moral philosophy at most times has been empty and boring ... [c]ontemporary moral philosophy has found an original way of being boring, which is by not discussing moral issues at all."[44][45] He argued that the study of ethics should be vital, compelling and difficult, and he sought an approach that was accountable to psychology and history.[2][46]

Williams was not an ethical realist, holding that unlike scientific knowledge, which can approach an "absolute conception of reality," an ethical judgment rests on a point of view.[47][48] He argued that the "thick" ethical concepts, such as kindness and cruelty, express a "union of fact and value."[49][50] The idea that our values are not "in the world" was liberating: "[A] radical form of freedom may be found in the fact that we cannot be forced by the world to accept one set of values rather than another" said Williams.[51][52][53]

Williams frequently emphasised what he saw as the ways in which luck pervades ethical life. He coined and developed the term moral luck, and illustrated the idea of moral luck via a number of enormously influential examples. One of Williams's famous examples of moral luck concerns the painter Paul Gauguin's decision to move to Tahiti.[54]

Critique of Kant edit

 
Immanuel Kant (1724–1804)

Williams's work throughout the 1970s and 1980s, in Morality: An Introduction to Ethics (1972), Problems of the Self (1973), Utilitarianism: For and Against with J. J. C. Smart (1973), Moral Luck (1981) and Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy (1985), outlined his attacks on the twin pillars of ethics: utilitarianism and the moral philosophy of the 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. Martha Nussbaum wrote that his work "denounced the trivial and evasive way in which moral philosophy was being practised in England under the aegis of those two dominant theories."[5] "Both theories simplified the moral life," she wrote, "neglecting emotions and personal attachments and how sheer luck shapes our choices."[55][56] (Williams said in 1996: "Roughly, if it isn't about obligation or consequences, it doesn't count.")[13]

Kant's Grundlegung zur Metaphysik der Sitten (1785) expounded a moral system based on the categorical imperative, one formulation of which is: "Act only according to that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law."[n 3] Rational agents must act on "principles of pure rational agency," writes Moore; that is, principles that regulate all rational agents. But Williams distinguished between thinking and acting. To think rationally is to think in a way compatible with belief in the truth, and "what it takes for one to believe the truth is the same as what it takes for anyone else to believe the truth," writes Moore. But one can act rationally by satisfying one's own desires (internal reasons for action), and what it takes to do that may not be what it takes for anyone else to satisfy theirs. Kant's approach to treating thinking and acting alike is wrong, according to Williams.[58]

Williams argued that Kant had given the "purest, deepest and most thorough representation of morality,"[59] but that the "honourable instincts of Kantianism to defend the individuality of individuals against the agglomerative indifference of Utilitarianism" may not be effective against the Kantian "abstract character of persons as moral agents." We should not be expected to act as though we are not who we are in the circumstances in which we find ourselves.[60]

Critique of utilitarianism edit

Williams set out the case against utilitarianism – a consequentialist position the simplest version of which is that actions are right only insofar as they promote the greatest happiness of the greatest number – in Utilitarianism: For and Against (1973) with J. J. C. Smart. One of the book's thought experiments involves Jim, a botanist doing research in a South American country led by a brutal dictator. Jim finds himself in a small town facing 20 captured Indian rebels. The captain who has arrested them says that if Jim will kill one, the others will be released in honour of Jim's status as a guest, but if he does not, they will all be killed. Simple act utilitarianism would favour Jim killing one of the men.[61]

Williams argued that there is a crucial distinction between a person being killed by Jim, and being killed by the captain because of an act or omission of Jim's. The captain, if he chooses to kill, is not simply the medium of an effect Jim is having on the world. He is the moral actor, the person with the intentions and projects. The utilitarian loses that distinction, turning us into empty vessels by means of which consequences occur. Williams argued that moral decisions must preserve our psychological identity and integrity.[62][63] We should reject any system that reduces moral decisions to a few algorithms.[64]

Reasons for action edit

Williams argued that there are only internal reasons for action: "A has a reason to φ if A has some desire the satisfaction of which will be served by his φ-ing."[65][66] An external reason would be "A has reason to φ," even if nothing in A's "subjective motivational set" would be furthered by her φ-ing. Williams argued that it is meaningless to say that there are external reasons; reason alone does not move people to action.[67][68][69][70]

Sophie-Grace Chappell argues that, without external reasons for action, it becomes impossible to maintain that the same set of moral reasons applies to all agents equally.[71] In cases where someone has no internal reason to do what others see as the right thing, they cannot be blamed for failing to do it, because internal reasons are the only reasons, and blame, Williams wrote, "involves treating the person who is blamed like someone who had a reason to do the right thing but did not do it."[72][73]

Truth edit

In his final completed book, Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy (2002), Williams identifies the two basic values of truth as accuracy and sincerity, and tries to address the gulf between the demand for truth and the doubt that any such thing exists.[74] Jane O'Grady wrote in a Guardian obituary of Williams that the book is an examination of those who "sneer at any purported truth as ludicrously naive because it is, inevitably, distorted by power, class bias and ideology."[26]

The debt to Friedrich Nietzsche is clear, most obviously in the adoption of a genealogical method as a tool of explanation and critique. Although part of Williams's intention was to attack those he felt denied the value of truth, the book cautions that, to understand it simply in that sense, would be to miss part of its purpose; rather, as Kenneth Baker wrote, it is "Williams' reflection on the moral cost of the intellectual vogue for dispensing with the concept of truth."[39]

Legacy edit

Williams did not propose any systematic philosophical theory; indeed, he was suspicious of any such attempt.[75] He became known for his dialectical powers, although he was suspicious of them too. Alan Code wrote that Williams had never been "impressed by the display of mere dialectical cleverness, least of all in moral philosophy":

On the contrary, one of the most notable features of his philosophical outlook was an unwavering insistence on a series of points that may seem obvious but which are nevertheless all-too-frequently neglected: that moral or ethical thought is part of human life; that in writing about it, philosophers are writing about something of genuine importance; that it is not easy to say anything worth saying about the subject; that what moral philosophers write is answerable to the realities of human history, psychology, and social affairs; and that mere cleverness is indeed not the relevant measure of value."[17]

Being in Williams's presence is at times painful because of that intensity of aliveness, which challenges the friend to something or other, and yet it was, and is, not terribly clear to what. To authenticity, I now think: to being and expressing oneself more courageously and clearly than one had done heretofore.

Martha Nussbaum, 2015[40]

In 1996 Martin Hollis said that Williams had "a good claim to be the leading British philosopher of his day," but that, although he had a "lovely eye for the central questions," he had none of the answers.[13] Alan Thomas identified Williams's contribution to ethics as an overarching scepticism about attempts to create a foundation for moral philosophy, explicitly articulated in Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy (1985) and Shame and Necessity (1993), in which he argued that moral theories can never reflect the complexities of life, particularly given the radical pluralism of modern societies.[76]

Learning to be yourself, to be authentic and to act with integrity, rather than conforming to any external moral system, is arguably the fundamental motif of Williams's work, according to Sophie Grace Chappell.[71] "If there's one theme in all my work it's about authenticity and self-expression," Williams said in 2002. "It's the idea that some things are in some real sense really you, or express what you and others aren't ... The whole thing has been about spelling out the notion of inner necessity."[11] He moved moral philosophy away from the Kantian question, "What is my duty?", and back to the issue that mattered to the Greeks: "How should we live?"[5]

Publications edit

Books

Posthumously published

  • In the Beginning was the Deed: Realism and Moralism in Political Argument, ed. Geoffrey Hawthorn, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.
  • The Sense of the Past: Essays in the Philosophy Of History, ed. Myles Burnyeat, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006.
  • Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline, ed. A. W. Moore, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006.
  • On Opera, ed. Patricia Williams, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006.
  • Essays and Reviews: 1959–2002, Princeton: Princeton University Press 2014.

Selected papers

  • "Morality and the emotions," in Bernard Williams, Problems of the Self, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973, 207–229, first delivered in 1965 as Williams's inaugural lecture at Bedford College, London.
  • , in Bernard Williams, Problems of the Self, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973.
  • "Pagan Justice and Christian Love," Apeiron 26(3–4), December 1993, 195–207.
  • "Cratylus's Theory of Names and Its Refutation," in Stephen Everson (ed.), Language, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
  • "The Actus Reus of Dr. Caligari", Pennsylvania Law Review 142, May 1994, 1661–1673.
  • "Descartes and the Historiography of Philosophy," in John Cottingham (ed.), Reason, Will and Sensation: Studies in Descartes's Metaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.
  • "Acting as the Virtuous Person Acts," in Robert Heinaman (ed.), Aristotle and Moral Realism, Westview Press, 1995.
  • "Ethics," in A. C. Grayling (ed.), Philosophy: A Guide Through the Subject, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • "Identity and Identities," in Henry Harris (ed.), Identity: Essays Based on Herbert Spencer Lectures Given in the University of Oxford, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • "Truth in Ethics," Ratio, 8(3), December 1995, 227–236.
  • "On Hating and Despising Philosophy", London Review of Books, 18(8), 18 April 1996, 17–18 ().
  • "Contemporary Philosophy: A Second Look," in N. F. Bunnin (ed.), The Blackwell Companion to Philosophy, Blackwell, 1996.
  • "History, Morality, and the Test of Reflection," in Onora O'Neill (ed.), The Sources of Normativity, Cambridge University Press, 1996.
  • "Reasons, Values and the Theory of Persuasion," in Francesco Farina, Frank Hahn and Stafano Vannucci (eds.), Ethics, Rationality and Economic Behavior, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.
  • "The Politics of Trust," in Patricia Yeager (ed.), The Geography of Identity, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996.
  • "The Women of Trachis: Fictions, Pessimism, Ethics," in R. B. Louden and P. Schollmeier (eds.), The Greeks and Us, Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1996.
  • "Toleration: An Impossible Virtue?" in David Heyd (ed.), Toleration: An Exclusive Virtue, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996.
  • "Truth, Politics and Self-Deception," Social Research 63.3, Fall 1996.
  • "Moral Responsibility and Political Freedom," Cambridge Law Journal 56, 1997.
  • "Stoic Philosophy and the Emotions: Reply to Richard Sorabji," in R. Sorabji (ed.), Aristotle and After, Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, Supplement 68, 1997.
  • "Tolerating the Intolerable," in Susan Mendus (ed.), The Politics of Toleration, Edinburgh University Press, 1999.
  • "Philosophy As a Humanistic Discipline," Philosophy 75, October 2000, 477–496.
  • "Understanding Homer: Literature, History and Ideal Anthropology," in Neil Roughley (ed.), Being Humans: Anthropological Universality and Particularity in Transdisciplinary Perspectives, Walter de Gruyter, 2000.
  • "Why Philosophy Needs History", London Review of Books, 24(20), 17 October 2002 ().

*Complete Bibliography (as of 2011) by A.W. Moore and Jonathan Williams.[77]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Shirley Williams, 2002: "Ours was a very alive marriage, but there was something of a strain that comes from two things. One is that we were both too caught up in what we were respectively doing – we didn't spend all that much time together; the other, to be completely honest, is that I'm fairly unjudgmental and I found Bernard's capacity for pretty sharp putting-down of people he thought were stupid unacceptable. ... He can be very painful sometimes. He can eviscerate somebody. Those who are left behind are, as it were, dead personalities."[11]
  2. ^ Bernard Williams, 2002: "I was persuaded that there was a real problem about academic conditions and that if my departure was publicized this would bring these matters to public attention. It did a bit, but it made me seem narky, and when I came back again in three years it looked rather absurd. I came back for personal reasons – it's harder to live out there with a family than I supposed."[11]
  3. ^ Kant: "Der categorische Imperativ ist also nur ein einziger, und zwar dieser: "handle nur nach derjenigen Maxime, durch die du zugleich wollen kannst, daß sie ein allgemeines Gesetz werde."[57]

References edit

  1. ^ Mark P. Jenkins, Bernard Williams, Abingdon: Routledge, 2014 [2006], 3.
  2. ^ a b Colin Koopman, "Bernard Williams on Philosophy's Need for History," The Review of Metaphysics, 64(1), September 2010, 3–30. JSTOR 29765339
  3. ^ Colin McGinn, "Isn't It the Truth?", The New York Review of Books, 10 April 2003.
  4. ^ Martha C. Nussbaum, "Tragedies, hope, justice," in Daniel Callcut (ed.), Reading Bernard Williams, Abingdon: Routledge, 2009, 213.
  5. ^ a b c d Martha C. Nussbaum, "Tragedy and Justice" 8 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine, Boston Review, October/November 2003.
  6. ^ Bryan Magee, Confessions of a Philosopher, Modern Library, 1999, 83.
  7. ^ a b Shirley Williams, Climbing the Bookshelves, London: Virago, 2009, 90.
  8. ^ Shirley Williams 2009, 115.
  9. ^ a b c Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, "Sir Bernard Williams, 73, Oxford Philosopher, Dies", The New York Times, 14 June 2003.
  10. ^ Supplement to the London Gazette, 10 June 1961, 4157.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Stuart Jeffries, "The Quest for Truth", The Guardian, 30 November 2002.
  12. ^ a b Bernard Williams, "A Mistrustful Animal: A Conversation with Bernard Williams," in Alex Voorhoeve (ed.), Conversations on Ethics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009, 196–197.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g John Davies, "A fugitive from the pigeonhole", Times Higher Education, 1 November 1996.
  14. ^ Bernard Williams, Morality: An Introduction to Ethics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972, 79.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k A. W. Moore, "Williams, Sir Bernard Arthur Owen (1929–2003), philosopher", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, January 2007.
  16. ^ a b c , The Times, 14 June 2003.
  17. ^ a b c d e Alan Code, Samuel Scheffler, Barry Stroud, "In Memoriam: Bernard A. O. Williams" 16 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine , University of California.
  18. ^ Shirley Williams 2009, 104, 114.
  19. ^ Shirley Williams 2009, 116–117.
  20. ^ Shirley Williams 2009, 120, 136, 154.
  21. ^ Shirley Williams 2009, 132.
  22. ^ Shirley Williams, God and Caesar: Personal Reflections on Politics and Religion, A&C Black, 2004, 17; Shirley Williams 2009, 132, 139.
  23. ^ Shirley Williams 2009, 143, 155.
  24. ^ a b Andy Beckett, "Centre forward", The Guardian, 2 April 2005.
  25. ^ Maya Oppenheim, "Baroness Shirley Williams: The Lib Dem co-founder once predicted to become the first female prime minister of Britain", The Independent, 11 February 2016.
  26. ^ a b Jane O'Grady, "Professor Sir Bernard Williams", The Guardian, 13 June 2003.
  27. ^ Martha C. Nussbaum, "'Don't smile so much': Philosophy and Women in the 1970s," in Linda Martín Alcoff (ed.), Singing in the Fire: Stories of Women in Philosophy, Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2003 (93–108), 100.
  28. ^ a b Shirley Williams 2009, 156–157.
  29. ^ "Shirley Williams: Views from the peer", Hertfordshire Life, 13 January 2010.
  30. ^ Mike Peel, Shirley Williams: The Biography, London: Biteback Publishing, 2013, 157.
  31. ^ "Bernard Williams", The Economist, 26 June 2003.
  32. ^ Mary Warnock, "The Williams Report on Obscenity and Film Censorship", The Political Quarterly, 51(3), July 1980 (341–344), 341.
  33. ^ Bernard Williams (ed.), Obscenity and Film Censorship: An Abridgement of the Williams Report, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015 [1981], 69.
  34. ^ "Professor Sir Bernard Williams", The Daily Telegraph, 14 June 2003.
  35. ^ Anthony Skillen, "Offences Ranked: The Williams Report on Obscenity," Philosophy, 57(220), April 1982 (237–245), 237. JSTOR 4619562
  36. ^ Williams report, 6.7, 85.
  37. ^ Patricia Williams, "Editorial preface," On Opera, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2006, 1.
  38. ^ Williams, On Opera, 165; also see Bernard Williams, "Wagner & Politics", The New York Review of Books, 2 November 2000.
  39. ^ a b Kenneth Baker, "Bernard Williams: Carrying the torch for truth", San Francisco Chronicle, 22 September 2002.
  40. ^ a b Martha C. Nussbaum, , The New Rambler, 2015.
  41. ^ Jerry Fodor, "Life in tune", The Times Literary Supplement, 17 January 2007.
  42. ^ a b c A. W. Moore, "Bernard Williams (1929–2003)", Philosophy Now, 2003.
  43. ^ Larissa MacFarquhar, "How to be good", The New Yorker, 5 September 2011 ().
  44. ^ Williams, Morality, 1972, xvii.
  45. ^ Onora Nell, "Review: Morality: An Introduction to Ethics by Bernard Williams," The Journal of Philosophy 72(12), 1975, 334–339. JSTOR 2025133
  46. ^ Bernard Williams, Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy, Abingdon: Routledge, 2011 [Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985], 193.
  47. ^ Williams, Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy, 139, 154.
  48. ^ A. W. Moore, "Realism and the Absolute Conception," in Alan Thomas (ed.), Bernard Williams, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007, 24–26.
  49. ^ Williams, Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy, 143–144.
  50. ^ A. W. Moore, "Bernard Williams: Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy," in John Shand (ed.), Central Works of Philosophy, Volume 5: The Twentieth Century: Quine and After, Montreal: McGill-Queen's Press, 2006, 217.
  51. ^ Williams, Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy, 142.
  52. ^ Carol Rovane, "Did Williams Find the Truth in Relativism?" in Daniel Callcut (ed.), Reading Bernard Williams, Abingdon: Routledge, 2009.
  53. ^ Bernard Williams, "The Truth in Relativism," in Moral Luck: Philosophical Papers 1973–1980, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981. First published in Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, LXXV, 1974–1975, 215–228.
  54. ^ "Living the life authentic: Bernard Williams on Paul Gauguin – Daniel Callcut | Aeon Essays". Aeon. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  55. ^ Nussbaum 2009, 213.
  56. ^ Bernard Williams, "Moral Luck," in Moral Luck, 1981, 20–39. First published in Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, supplementary volume 1, 1976, 115–135.
  57. ^ Immanuel Kant, Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals: A German-English edition, 1786 [1785], Mary Gregor and Jens Timmermann (eds.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011, 4:421, 70–71.
  58. ^ Moore 2006, 213.
  59. ^ Williams, Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy, 194.
  60. ^ Bernard Williams, "Persons, character and morality," in Amélie Oksenberg Rorty (ed.), The Identities of Persons, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976 (197–216), 200–201, 215.
  61. ^ J. J. C. Smart, Bernard Williams, Utilitarianism: For and Against, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973, 98–99.
  62. ^ Smart and Williams 1973, 109ff.
  63. ^ Daniel Markovits, "The architecture of integrity," in Daniel Callcut (ed.), Reading Bernard Williams, Abingdon: Routledge, 2009.
  64. ^ Williams, Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy, 117.
  65. ^ Bernard Williams, "Internal and external reasons," in Moral Luck, 1981 (101–113), 101. First published in Ross Harrison (ed.), Rational action, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979, 17–28.
  66. ^ John Skorupski, "Internal reasons and the scope of blame," in Alan Thomas (ed.), Bernard Williams, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007, 74.
  67. ^ Bernard Williams, "Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame," 1989, reprinted in Williams, Making Sense of Humanity, and Other Philosophical Papers 1982–1993, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995, 35–45.
  68. ^ Bernard Williams, "Replies," in J. E. J. Altham, Ross Harrison (eds.), World, Mind and Ethics: Essays on the Ethical Philosophy of Bernard Williams, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
  69. ^ Bernard Williams, "Postscript: Some Further Notes on Internal and External Reasons," in Elijah Millgram (ed.), Varieties of Practical Reasoning, Cambridge: MIT Press, 2001.
  70. ^ Jenkins 2014, 89.
  71. ^ a b Sophie Grace Chappell, "Bernard Williams", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 8 November 2013 [1 February 2006].
  72. ^ Williams 1989, in Making Sense of Humanity, 42.
  73. ^ Skorupski 2007, 93–94.
  74. ^ David E. Cooper, Truth and Truthfulness: An Essay in Genealogy by Bernard Williams," Philosophy, 78(305), July 2003, 411–414. JSTOR 3752065
  75. ^ Daniel Callcut, "Introduction," in Callcut 2009, 1–2.
  76. ^ Alan Thomas, "Williams, Bernard," in Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999 (2nd edition), 975.
  77. ^ "Resources". Ethics and the Place of Philosophy. 27 October 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Nagel, Thomas. , Mortal Questions, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979.
  • Nagel, Thomas. "Sir Bernard Williams", Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • Perry, Alexandra; Herrera, Chris. The Moral Philosophy of Bernard Williams, Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011.

External links edit

  • Sophie-Grace Chappell, Nicholas Smyth. "Bernard Williams". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • "The Spell of Linguistic Philosophy", Byran Magee interviews Bernard Williams, BBC, 1977, from 00:03:32.
  • "Bernard Williams", London Review of Books.
  • "Bernard Williams", The New York Review of Books.
  • "Bernard Williams: Ethics from a Human Point of View", Paul Russell, Times Literary Supplement.
  • "Bernard Williams: Philosopher", Links to articles, interviews, videos and more.
Academic offices
Preceded by Provost of King's College, Cambridge
1979–1987
Succeeded by


bernard, williams, other, people, named, disambiguation, bernard, arthur, owen, williams, september, 1929, june, 2003, english, moral, philosopher, publications, include, problems, self, 1973, ethics, limits, philosophy, 1985, shame, necessity, 1993, truth, tr. For other people named Bernard Williams see Bernard Williams disambiguation Sir Bernard Arthur Owen Williams FBA 21 September 1929 10 June 2003 was an English moral philosopher His publications include Problems of the Self 1973 Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 1985 Shame and Necessity 1993 and Truth and Truthfulness 2002 He was knighted in 1999 SirBernard WilliamsBornBernard Arthur Owen Williams 1929 09 21 21 September 1929Westcliff on Sea EnglandDied10 June 2003 2003 06 10 aged 73 Rome ItalyEducationBalliol College OxfordSpousesShirley Brittain Catlin m 1955 div 1974 wbr Patricia Law Skinner m 1974 wbr EraContemporary philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic philosophy Postanalytic philosophyInstitutionsAll Souls College OxfordNew College OxfordUniversity College LondonBedford College LondonKing s College CambridgeUniversity of California BerkeleyCorpus Christi College OxfordAcademic advisorsGilbert RyleNotable studentsMyles Burnyeat Jonathan Sacks Martha NussbaumMain interestsEthicsNotable ideasInternal reasons for action moral luck dirty handsAs Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and Deutsch Professor of Philosophy at the University of California Berkeley Williams became known for his efforts to reorient the study of moral philosophy to psychology history and in particular to the Greeks 1 2 Described by Colin McGinn as an analytical philosopher with the soul of a general humanist he was sceptical about attempts to create a foundation for moral philosophy Martha Nussbaum wrote that he demanded of philosophy that it come to terms with and contain the difficulty and complexity of human life 3 4 Williams was a strong supporter of women in academia according to Nussbaum he was as close to being a feminist as a powerful man of his generation could be 5 He was also famously sharp in conversation Gilbert Ryle one of Williams s mentors at Oxford said that he understands what you re going to say better than you understand it yourself and sees all the possible objections to it and all the possible answers to all the possible objections before you ve got to the end of your own sentence 6 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 First marriage London 1 3 Cambridge second marriage 1 4 Berkeley and Oxford 1 5 Royal commissions committees 1 6 Opera 1 7 Honours and death 2 Writing 2 1 Approach to ethics 2 2 Critique of Kant 2 3 Critique of utilitarianism 2 4 Reasons for action 2 5 Truth 3 Legacy 4 Publications 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editEarly life and education edit nbsp Chigwell School Epping Forest EssexThe young Bernard was in perpetual intellectual motion like a dragonfly hovering above a sea of ideas Everyone he encountered every event that occurred were material for his insight and his wit 7 Shirley Williams 2009 8 Williams was born in Westcliff on Sea a suburb of Southend Essex to Hilda Amy Williams nee Day a personal assistant and Owen Pasley Denny Williams chief maintenance surveyor for the Ministry of Works 9 10 He was educated at Chigwell School an independent school where he first discovered philosophy 11 12 Reading D H Lawrence led him to ethics and the problems of the self 13 In his first book Morality An Introduction to Ethics 1972 he quoted with approval Lawrence s advice to f ind your deepest impulse and follow that 14 Awarded a scholarship to Oxford Williams read Greats pure Classics followed by Ancient History and philosophy at Balliol Among his influences at Oxford were W S Watt Russell Meiggs R M Hare Elizabeth Anscombe Eric Dodds Eduard Fraenkel David Pears and Gilbert Ryle 15 He shone in the first part of the course the pure classics being particularly fond of writing Latin verses in the style of Ovid and graduated in 1951 with a congratulatory first in the second part of the course and a prize fellowship at All Souls 12 16 After Oxford Williams spent his two year national service flying Spitfires in Canada for the Royal Air Force While on leave in New York he became close to Shirley Brittain Catlin born 1930 daughter of the novelist Vera Brittain and the political scientist George Catlin 11 They had already been friends at Oxford Catlin had moved to New York to study economics at Columbia University on a Fulbright scholarship 7 Williams returned to England to take up his fellowship at All Souls and in 1954 became a fellow at New College Oxford a position he held until 1959 17 He and Catlin continued seeing each other She began working for the Daily Mirror and sought election as a Labour MP Williams also a member of the Labour Party helped her with the 1954 by election in Harwich in which she was an unsuccessful candidate 18 15 First marriage London edit nbsp Shirley Williams 2011Williams and Catlin were married in London in July 1955 at St James s Spanish Place near Marylebone High Street followed by a honeymoon in Lesbos Greece 19 The couple moved into a very basic ground floor apartment in London on Clarendon Road Notting Hill Given how hard it was to find decent housing they decided instead to share with Helge Rubinstein and her husband the literary agent Hilary Rubinstein who at the time was working for his uncle Victor Gollancz In 1955 the four of them bought a four storey seven bedroom house in Phillimore Place Kensington for 6 800 a home they lived in together for 14 years 20 Williams described it as one of the happiest periods of his life 11 In 1958 Williams spent a term teaching at the University of Ghana in Legon When he returned to England in 1959 he was appointed lecturer in philosophy at University College London 21 In 1961 after four miscarriages in four years Shirley Williams gave birth to their daughter Rebecca 22 Williams was a visiting professor at Princeton University in 1963 15 and was appointed Professor of Philosophy at Bedford College London in 1964 His wife was elected to parliament that year as the Labour member for Hitchin in Hertfordshire 23 The Sunday Times described the couple two years later as the New Left at its most able most generous and sometimes most eccentric Andy Beckett wrote that they entertained refugees from eastern Europe and politicians from Africa and drank sherry in noteworthy quantities 24 Shirley Williams became a junior minister and in 1971 Shadow Home Secretary Several newspapers saw her as a future prime minister 25 She went on to co found a new centrist party in 1981 the Social Democratic Party Williams left the Labour Party to join the SDP although he later returned to Labour 15 Cambridge second marriage edit nbsp Williams spent over 20 years at King s College Cambridge eight of them as provost In 1967 at the age of 38 Williams became the Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of King s College 17 According to Jane O Grady Williams was central to the decision by King s in 1972 to admit women one of the first three all male Oxbridge undergraduate colleges to do so 26 In both his first and second marriages he supported his wives in their careers and helped with the children more than was common for men at the time 5 In the 1970s when Nussbaum s thesis supervisor G E L Owen was harassing female students and she decided nevertheless to support him Williams told her during a walk along the backs at Cambridge Y ou know there is a price you are paying for this support and encouragement Your dignity is being held hostage You really don t have to put up with this 27 Shirley Williams s political career the House of Commons regularly sat until 10 pm meant that the couple spent a lot of time apart They bought a house in Furneux Pelham Hertfordshire near the border with south Cambridgeshire while she lived in Phillimore Place during the week to be close to the Houses of Parliament Sunday was often the only day they were together 28 29 The differences in their personal values he was an atheist she a Catholic placed a further strain on their relationship n 1 It reached breaking point in 1970 when Williams formed a relationship with Patricia Law Skinner a commissioning editor for Cambridge University Press and wife of the historian Quentin Skinner 9 30 She had approached Williams to write the opposing view of utilitarianism for Utilitarianism For and Against with J J C Smart 1973 and they had fallen in love 11 Williams and Skinner began living together in 1971 15 He obtained a divorce in 1974 at Shirley Williams request the marriage was later annulled 28 11 Patricia Williams married him that year and the couple went on to have two sons Jacob in 1975 and Jonathan in 1980 9 15 Shirley Williams married the political scientist Richard Neustadt in 1987 24 Berkeley and Oxford edit nbsp University of California BerkeleyIn 1979 Williams was elected Provost of King s a position he held until 1987 He spent a semester in 1986 at the University of California Berkeley as Mills Visiting Professor and in 1988 left England to become Monroe Deutsch Professor of Philosophy there announcing to the media that he was leaving as part of the brain drain of British academics to America He was also Sather Professor of Classical Literature at Berkeley in 1989 Shame and Necessity 1995 grew out of his six Sather lectures 17 13 Williams returned to England in 1990 as White s Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford and fellow of Corpus Christi His sons had been at sea in California he said not knowing what was expected of them and he had been unable to help 13 He regretted having made his departure from England so public he had been persuaded to do so to highlight Britain s relatively low academic salaries n 2 When he retired in 1996 he took up a fellowship again at All Souls 11 Royal commissions committees edit nbsp All Souls College OxfordWilliams served on several royal commissions and government committees the Public Schools Commission 1965 1970 drug abuse 1971 gambling 1976 1978 the Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship 1979 and the Commission on Social Justice 1993 1994 I did all the major vices he said 16 31 While on the gambling commission one of his recommendations ignored at the time was for a national lottery 13 John Major s government introduced one in 1994 Mary Warnock described Williams s report on pornography in 1979 as chair of the Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship as agreeable actually compulsive to read 32 It relied on a harm condition that no conduct should be suppressed by law unless it can be shown to harm someone and concluded that so long as children were protected from pornography adults should be free to read and watch it as they see fit 33 11 34 The report rejected the view that pornography tends to cause sexual offences 35 Two cases in particular were highlighted the Moors Murders and the Cambridge Rapist where the influence of pornography had been discussed during the trials The report argued that both cases appeared to be more consistent with pre existing traits being reflected both in a choice of reading matter and in the acts committed against others 36 Opera edit Williams enjoyed opera from an early age particularly Mozart and Wagner Patricia Williams writes that he attended performances of the Carl Rosa Company and Sadler s Wells as a teenager 37 In an essay on Wagner he described having been reduced to a virtually uncontrollable state during a performance by Jon Vickers as Tristan at Covent Garden 38 He served on the board of the English National Opera from 1968 to 1986 15 and wrote an entry The Nature of Opera for The New Grove Dictionary of Opera 13 39 A collection of his essays On Opera was published posthumously in 2006 edited by Patricia Williams 40 41 Honours and death edit Williams became a member of the Institut international de philosophie in 1969 a fellow of the British Academy in 1971 and an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1983 The following year he was made a syndic of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge and later the chair In 1993 he was elected to a fellowship of the Royal Society of Arts and in 1999 he was knighted Several universities awarded him honorary doctorates including Yale and Harvard 15 17 Williams died of heart failure on 10 June 2003 while on holiday in Rome he had been diagnosed in 1999 with multiple myeloma a form of cancer 15 42 He was survived by his wife their two sons and his first child Rebecca 16 He was cremated in Rome 15 Writing editApproach to ethics edit A W Moore writes that Williams work lies within the analytic tradition although less typical of it in its breadth in its erudition and above all in its profound humanity Although he was never a vigorous apologist for that tradition he always maintained the standards of clarity and rigour which it prizes and his work is a model of all that is best in the tradition It is brilliant deep and imaginative It is also extraordinarily tight There cannot be many critics of his work who have not thought of some objection to what he says only to find on looking for a relevant quotation to turn into a target that Williams carefully presents his views in a way that precisely anticipates the objection 42 Williams did not produce any ethical theory or system several commentators noted unfairly in the view of his supporters that he was largely a critic Moore writes that Williams was unaffected by this criticism He simply refused to allow philosophical system building to eclipse the subtlety and variety of human ethical experience 15 He equated ethical theories with a tidiness a systematicity and an economy of ideas writes Moore that were not up to describing human lives and motives Williams tried not to lose touch with the real concerns that animate our ordinary ethical experience unlike much of the arid ahistorical second order debates about ethics in philosophy departments 42 43 In his first book Morality An Introduction to Ethics 1972 Williams wrote that whereas most moral philosophy at most times has been empty and boring c ontemporary moral philosophy has found an original way of being boring which is by not discussing moral issues at all 44 45 He argued that the study of ethics should be vital compelling and difficult and he sought an approach that was accountable to psychology and history 2 46 Williams was not an ethical realist holding that unlike scientific knowledge which can approach an absolute conception of reality an ethical judgment rests on a point of view 47 48 He argued that the thick ethical concepts such as kindness and cruelty express a union of fact and value 49 50 The idea that our values are not in the world was liberating A radical form of freedom may be found in the fact that we cannot be forced by the world to accept one set of values rather than another said Williams 51 52 53 Williams frequently emphasised what he saw as the ways in which luck pervades ethical life He coined and developed the term moral luck and illustrated the idea of moral luck via a number of enormously influential examples One of Williams s famous examples of moral luck concerns the painter Paul Gauguin s decision to move to Tahiti 54 Critique of Kant edit nbsp Immanuel Kant 1724 1804 Williams s work throughout the 1970s and 1980s in Morality An Introduction to Ethics 1972 Problems of the Self 1973 Utilitarianism For and Against with J J C Smart 1973 Moral Luck 1981 and Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 1985 outlined his attacks on the twin pillars of ethics utilitarianism and the moral philosophy of the 18th century German philosopher Immanuel Kant Martha Nussbaum wrote that his work denounced the trivial and evasive way in which moral philosophy was being practised in England under the aegis of those two dominant theories 5 Both theories simplified the moral life she wrote neglecting emotions and personal attachments and how sheer luck shapes our choices 55 56 Williams said in 1996 Roughly if it isn t about obligation or consequences it doesn t count 13 Kant s Grundlegung zur Metaphysik der Sitten 1785 expounded a moral system based on the categorical imperative one formulation of which is Act only according to that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law n 3 Rational agents must act on principles of pure rational agency writes Moore that is principles that regulate all rational agents But Williams distinguished between thinking and acting To think rationally is to think in a way compatible with belief in the truth and what it takes for one to believe the truth is the same as what it takes for anyone else to believe the truth writes Moore But one can act rationally by satisfying one s own desires internal reasons for action and what it takes to do that may not be what it takes for anyone else to satisfy theirs Kant s approach to treating thinking and acting alike is wrong according to Williams 58 Williams argued that Kant had given the purest deepest and most thorough representation of morality 59 but that the honourable instincts of Kantianism to defend the individuality of individuals against the agglomerative indifference of Utilitarianism may not be effective against the Kantian abstract character of persons as moral agents We should not be expected to act as though we are not who we are in the circumstances in which we find ourselves 60 Critique of utilitarianism edit Further information Act utilitarianism Rule utilitarianism and Preference utilitarianism Williams set out the case against utilitarianism a consequentialist position the simplest version of which is that actions are right only insofar as they promote the greatest happiness of the greatest number in Utilitarianism For and Against 1973 with J J C Smart One of the book s thought experiments involves Jim a botanist doing research in a South American country led by a brutal dictator Jim finds himself in a small town facing 20 captured Indian rebels The captain who has arrested them says that if Jim will kill one the others will be released in honour of Jim s status as a guest but if he does not they will all be killed Simple act utilitarianism would favour Jim killing one of the men 61 Williams argued that there is a crucial distinction between a person being killed by Jim and being killed by the captain because of an act or omission of Jim s The captain if he chooses to kill is not simply the medium of an effect Jim is having on the world He is the moral actor the person with the intentions and projects The utilitarian loses that distinction turning us into empty vessels by means of which consequences occur Williams argued that moral decisions must preserve our psychological identity and integrity 62 63 We should reject any system that reduces moral decisions to a few algorithms 64 Reasons for action edit Further information Internalism and externalism Reasons Williams argued that there are only internal reasons for action A has a reason to f if A has some desire the satisfaction of which will be served by his f ing 65 66 An external reason would be A has reason to f even if nothing in A s subjective motivational set would be furthered by her f ing Williams argued that it is meaningless to say that there are external reasons reason alone does not move people to action 67 68 69 70 Sophie Grace Chappell argues that without external reasons for action it becomes impossible to maintain that the same set of moral reasons applies to all agents equally 71 In cases where someone has no internal reason to do what others see as the right thing they cannot be blamed for failing to do it because internal reasons are the only reasons and blame Williams wrote involves treating the person who is blamed like someone who had a reason to do the right thing but did not do it 72 73 Truth edit In his final completed book Truth and Truthfulness An Essay in Genealogy 2002 Williams identifies the two basic values of truth as accuracy and sincerity and tries to address the gulf between the demand for truth and the doubt that any such thing exists 74 Jane O Grady wrote in a Guardian obituary of Williams that the book is an examination of those who sneer at any purported truth as ludicrously naive because it is inevitably distorted by power class bias and ideology 26 The debt to Friedrich Nietzsche is clear most obviously in the adoption of a genealogical method as a tool of explanation and critique Although part of Williams s intention was to attack those he felt denied the value of truth the book cautions that to understand it simply in that sense would be to miss part of its purpose rather as Kenneth Baker wrote it is Williams reflection on the moral cost of the intellectual vogue for dispensing with the concept of truth 39 Legacy editWilliams did not propose any systematic philosophical theory indeed he was suspicious of any such attempt 75 He became known for his dialectical powers although he was suspicious of them too Alan Code wrote that Williams had never been impressed by the display of mere dialectical cleverness least of all in moral philosophy On the contrary one of the most notable features of his philosophical outlook was an unwavering insistence on a series of points that may seem obvious but which are nevertheless all too frequently neglected that moral or ethical thought is part of human life that in writing about it philosophers are writing about something of genuine importance that it is not easy to say anything worth saying about the subject that what moral philosophers write is answerable to the realities of human history psychology and social affairs and that mere cleverness is indeed not the relevant measure of value 17 Being in Williams s presence is at times painful because of that intensity of aliveness which challenges the friend to something or other and yet it was and is not terribly clear to what To authenticity I now think to being and expressing oneself more courageously and clearly than one had done heretofore Martha Nussbaum 2015 40 In 1996 Martin Hollis said that Williams had a good claim to be the leading British philosopher of his day but that although he had a lovely eye for the central questions he had none of the answers 13 Alan Thomas identified Williams s contribution to ethics as an overarching scepticism about attempts to create a foundation for moral philosophy explicitly articulated in Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 1985 and Shame and Necessity 1993 in which he argued that moral theories can never reflect the complexities of life particularly given the radical pluralism of modern societies 76 Learning to be yourself to be authentic and to act with integrity rather than conforming to any external moral system is arguably the fundamental motif of Williams s work according to Sophie Grace Chappell 71 If there s one theme in all my work it s about authenticity and self expression Williams said in 2002 It s the idea that some things are in some real sense really you or express what you and others aren t The whole thing has been about spelling out the notion of inner necessity 11 He moved moral philosophy away from the Kantian question What is my duty and back to the issue that mattered to the Greeks How should we live 5 Publications editBooks with Alan Montefiore eds British Analytical Philosophy London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1966 Morality An Introduction to Ethics Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1972 Problems of the Self Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1973 with J J C Smart Utilitarianism For and Against Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1973 Descartes The Project of Pure Enquiry London Pelican Books 1978 Moral Luck Philosophical Papers 1973 1980 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1981 with Amartya Sen Utilitarianism and Beyond Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1982 Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy Cambridge Harvard University Press 1985 Shame and Necessity Berkeley University of California Press 1993 Making Sense of Humanity Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 The Great Philosophers Plato Abingdon Routledge 1998 Truth and Truthfulness An Essay in Genealogy Princeton Princeton University Press 2002 Posthumously published In the Beginning was the Deed Realism and Moralism in Political Argument ed Geoffrey Hawthorn Princeton Princeton University Press 2005 The Sense of the Past Essays in the Philosophy Of History ed Myles Burnyeat Princeton Princeton University Press 2006 Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline ed A W Moore Princeton Princeton University Press 2006 On Opera ed Patricia Williams New Haven Yale University Press 2006 Essays and Reviews 1959 2002 Princeton Princeton University Press 2014 Selected papers Morality and the emotions in Bernard Williams Problems of the Self Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1973 207 229 first delivered in 1965 as Williams s inaugural lecture at Bedford College London The Makropulos Case Reflections on the tedium of immortality in Bernard Williams Problems of the Self Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1973 Pagan Justice and Christian Love Apeiron 26 3 4 December 1993 195 207 Cratylus s Theory of Names and Its Refutation in Stephen Everson ed Language Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 The Actus Reus of Dr Caligari Pennsylvania Law Review 142 May 1994 1661 1673 Descartes and the Historiography of Philosophy in John Cottingham ed Reason Will and Sensation Studies in Descartes s Metaphysics Oxford Oxford University Press 1994 Acting as the Virtuous Person Acts in Robert Heinaman ed Aristotle and Moral Realism Westview Press 1995 Ethics in A C Grayling ed Philosophy A Guide Through the Subject Oxford Oxford University Press 1995 Identity and Identities in Henry Harris ed Identity Essays Based on Herbert Spencer Lectures Given in the University of Oxford Oxford Oxford University Press 1995 Truth in Ethics Ratio 8 3 December 1995 227 236 On Hating and Despising Philosophy London Review of Books 18 8 18 April 1996 17 18 courtesy link Contemporary Philosophy A Second Look in N F Bunnin ed The Blackwell Companion to Philosophy Blackwell 1996 History Morality and the Test of Reflection in Onora O Neill ed The Sources of Normativity Cambridge University Press 1996 Reasons Values and the Theory of Persuasion in Francesco Farina Frank Hahn and Stafano Vannucci eds Ethics Rationality and Economic Behavior Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 The Politics of Trust in Patricia Yeager ed The Geography of Identity Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 1996 The Women of Trachis Fictions Pessimism Ethics in R B Louden and P Schollmeier eds The Greeks and Us Chicago Chicago University Press 1996 Toleration An Impossible Virtue in David Heyd ed Toleration An Exclusive Virtue Princeton Princeton University Press 1996 Truth Politics and Self Deception Social Research 63 3 Fall 1996 Moral Responsibility and Political Freedom Cambridge Law Journal 56 1997 Stoic Philosophy and the Emotions Reply to Richard Sorabji in R Sorabji ed Aristotle and After Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement 68 1997 Tolerating the Intolerable in Susan Mendus ed The Politics of Toleration Edinburgh University Press 1999 Philosophy As a Humanistic Discipline Philosophy 75 October 2000 477 496 Understanding Homer Literature History and Ideal Anthropology in Neil Roughley ed Being Humans Anthropological Universality and Particularity in Transdisciplinary Perspectives Walter de Gruyter 2000 Why Philosophy Needs History London Review of Books 24 20 17 October 2002 courtesy link Complete Bibliography as of 2011 by A W Moore and Jonathan Williams 77 Notes edit Shirley Williams 2002 Ours was a very alive marriage but there was something of a strain that comes from two things One is that we were both too caught up in what we were respectively doing we didn t spend all that much time together the other to be completely honest is that I m fairly unjudgmental and I found Bernard s capacity for pretty sharp putting down of people he thought were stupid unacceptable He can be very painful sometimes He can eviscerate somebody Those who are left behind are as it were dead personalities 11 Bernard Williams 2002 I was persuaded that there was a real problem about academic conditions and that if my departure was publicized this would bring these matters to public attention It did a bit but it made me seem narky and when I came back again in three years it looked rather absurd I came back for personal reasons it s harder to live out there with a family than I supposed 11 Kant Der categorische Imperativ ist also nur ein einziger und zwar dieser handle nur nach derjenigen Maxime durch die du zugleich wollen kannst dass sie ein allgemeines Gesetz werde 57 References edit Mark P Jenkins Bernard Williams Abingdon Routledge 2014 2006 3 a b Colin Koopman Bernard Williams on Philosophy s Need for History The Review of Metaphysics 64 1 September 2010 3 30 JSTOR 29765339 Colin McGinn Isn t It the Truth The New York Review of Books 10 April 2003 Martha C Nussbaum Tragedies hope justice in Daniel Callcut ed Reading Bernard Williams Abingdon Routledge 2009 213 a b c d Martha C Nussbaum Tragedy and Justice Archived 8 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine Boston Review October November 2003 Bryan Magee Confessions of a Philosopher Modern Library 1999 83 a b Shirley Williams Climbing the Bookshelves London Virago 2009 90 Shirley Williams 2009 115 a b c Christopher Lehmann Haupt Sir Bernard Williams 73 Oxford Philosopher Dies The New York Times 14 June 2003 Supplement to the London Gazette 10 June 1961 4157 a b c d e f g h i j Stuart Jeffries The Quest for Truth The Guardian 30 November 2002 a b Bernard Williams A Mistrustful Animal A Conversation with Bernard Williams in Alex Voorhoeve ed Conversations on Ethics Oxford Oxford University Press 2009 196 197 a b c d e f g John Davies A fugitive from the pigeonhole Times Higher Education 1 November 1996 Bernard Williams Morality An Introduction to Ethics Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1972 79 a b c d e f g h i j k A W Moore Williams Sir Bernard Arthur Owen 1929 2003 philosopher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography January 2007 a b c Professor Sir Bernard Williams The Times 14 June 2003 a b c d e Alan Code Samuel Scheffler Barry Stroud In Memoriam Bernard A O Williams Archived 16 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine University of California Shirley Williams 2009 104 114 Shirley Williams 2009 116 117 Shirley Williams 2009 120 136 154 Shirley Williams 2009 132 Shirley Williams God and Caesar Personal Reflections on Politics and Religion A amp C Black 2004 17 Shirley Williams 2009 132 139 Shirley Williams 2009 143 155 a b Andy Beckett Centre forward The Guardian 2 April 2005 Maya Oppenheim Baroness Shirley Williams The Lib Dem co founder once predicted to become the first female prime minister of Britain The Independent 11 February 2016 a b Jane O Grady Professor Sir Bernard Williams The Guardian 13 June 2003 Martha C Nussbaum Don t smile so much Philosophy and Women in the 1970s in Linda Martin Alcoff ed Singing in the Fire Stories of Women in Philosophy Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc 2003 93 108 100 a b Shirley Williams 2009 156 157 Shirley Williams Views from the peer Hertfordshire Life 13 January 2010 Mike Peel Shirley Williams The Biography London Biteback Publishing 2013 157 Bernard Williams The Economist 26 June 2003 Mary Warnock The Williams Report on Obscenity and Film Censorship The Political Quarterly 51 3 July 1980 341 344 341 Bernard Williams ed Obscenity and Film Censorship An Abridgement of the Williams Report Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2015 1981 69 Professor Sir Bernard Williams The Daily Telegraph 14 June 2003 Anthony Skillen Offences Ranked The Williams Report on Obscenity Philosophy 57 220 April 1982 237 245 237 JSTOR 4619562 Williams report 6 7 85 Patricia Williams Editorial preface On Opera New Haven Yale University Press 2006 1 Williams On Opera 165 also see Bernard Williams Wagner amp Politics The New York Review of Books 2 November 2000 a b Kenneth Baker Bernard Williams Carrying the torch for truth San Francisco Chronicle 22 September 2002 a b Martha C Nussbaum Moral and Musical Hazard The New Rambler 2015 Jerry Fodor Life in tune The Times Literary Supplement 17 January 2007 a b c A W Moore Bernard Williams 1929 2003 Philosophy Now 2003 Larissa MacFarquhar How to be good The New Yorker 5 September 2011 archived Williams Morality 1972 xvii Onora Nell Review Morality An Introduction to Ethics by Bernard Williams The Journal of Philosophy 72 12 1975 334 339 JSTOR 2025133 Bernard Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy Abingdon Routledge 2011 Cambridge Harvard University Press 1985 193 Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 139 154 A W Moore Realism and the Absolute Conception in Alan Thomas ed Bernard Williams Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2007 24 26 Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 143 144 A W Moore Bernard Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy in John Shand ed Central Works of Philosophy Volume 5 The Twentieth Century Quine and After Montreal McGill Queen s Press 2006 217 Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 142 Carol Rovane Did Williams Find the Truth in Relativism in Daniel Callcut ed Reading Bernard Williams Abingdon Routledge 2009 Bernard Williams The Truth in Relativism in Moral Luck Philosophical Papers 1973 1980 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1981 First published in Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society LXXV 1974 1975 215 228 Living the life authentic Bernard Williams on Paul Gauguin Daniel Callcut Aeon Essays Aeon Retrieved 18 December 2018 Nussbaum 2009 213 Bernard Williams Moral Luck in Moral Luck 1981 20 39 First published in Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society supplementary volume 1 1976 115 135 Immanuel Kant Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals A German English edition 1786 1785 Mary Gregor and Jens Timmermann eds Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2011 4 421 70 71 Moore 2006 213 Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 194 Bernard Williams Persons character and morality in Amelie Oksenberg Rorty ed The Identities of Persons Berkeley University of California Press 1976 197 216 200 201 215 J J C Smart Bernard Williams Utilitarianism For and Against Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1973 98 99 Smart and Williams 1973 109ff Daniel Markovits The architecture of integrity in Daniel Callcut ed Reading Bernard Williams Abingdon Routledge 2009 Williams Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy 117 Bernard Williams Internal and external reasons in Moral Luck 1981 101 113 101 First published in Ross Harrison ed Rational action Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1979 17 28 John Skorupski Internal reasons and the scope of blame in Alan Thomas ed Bernard Williams Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2007 74 Bernard Williams Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame 1989 reprinted in Williams Making Sense of Humanity and Other Philosophical Papers 1982 1993 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 35 45 Bernard Williams Replies in J E J Altham Ross Harrison eds World Mind and Ethics Essays on the Ethical Philosophy of Bernard Williams Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 Bernard Williams Postscript Some Further Notes on Internal and External Reasons in Elijah Millgram ed Varieties of Practical Reasoning Cambridge MIT Press 2001 Jenkins 2014 89 a b Sophie Grace Chappell Bernard Williams Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 8 November 2013 1 February 2006 Williams 1989 in Making Sense of Humanity 42 Skorupski 2007 93 94 David E Cooper Truth and Truthfulness An Essay in Genealogy by Bernard Williams Philosophy 78 305 July 2003 411 414 JSTOR 3752065 Daniel Callcut Introduction in Callcut 2009 1 2 Alan Thomas Williams Bernard in Robert Audi ed The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 2nd edition 975 Resources Ethics and the Place of Philosophy 27 October 2011 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Further reading editNagel Thomas Moral Luck Mortal Questions Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1979 Nagel Thomas Sir Bernard Williams Encyclopaedia Britannica Perry Alexandra Herrera Chris The Moral Philosophy of Bernard Williams Newcastle Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2011 External links editBernard Williams at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Sophie Grace Chappell Nicholas Smyth Bernard Williams In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Spell of Linguistic Philosophy Byran Magee interviews Bernard Williams BBC 1977 from 00 03 32 Bernard Williams London Review of Books Bernard Williams The New York Review of Books Bernard Williams Ethics from a Human Point of View Paul Russell Times Literary Supplement Bernard Williams Philosopher Links to articles interviews videos and more Academic officesPreceded byEdmund Leach Provost of King s College Cambridge1979 1987 Succeeded byPatrick Bateson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bernard Williams amp oldid 1184988610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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