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J. M. E. McTaggart

John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart[a] FBA (3 September 1866 – 18 January 1925) was an English idealist metaphysician. For most of his life McTaggart was a fellow and lecturer in philosophy at Trinity College, Cambridge. He was an exponent of the philosophy of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and among the most notable of the British idealists. McTaggart is known for "The Unreality of Time" (1908), in which he argues that time is unreal. The work has been widely discussed through the 20th century and into the 21st.

J. M. E. McTaggart

Portrait by Walter Stoneman, 1917
Born
John McTaggart Ellis

3 September 1866
London, England
Died18 January 1925(1925-01-18) (aged 58)
London, England
Other namesJohn McTaggart Ellis McTaggart
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Spouse
Margaret Elizabeth Bird
(m. 1899)
Era19th-/20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolBritish idealism
Academic advisors
Notable studentsC. D. Broad
Main interests
Notable ideas

Personal life edit

McTaggart was born on 3 September 1866 in London to cousins Francis Ellis (son of Thomas Flower Ellis) and Caroline Ellis. At birth, he was named John McTaggart Ellis, after his great-uncle, Sir John McTaggart. Early in his life, his family took the surname McTaggart as a condition of inheritance from that same uncle.[3]

McTaggart attended Clifton College, Bristol,[4] before going up to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1885.[5] At Trinity he was taught for the Moral Sciences Tripos by Henry Sidgwick and James Ward, both distinguished philosophers. After obtaining First class honours (the only student of Moral Sciences to do so in 1888),[6] he was, in 1891, elected to a prize fellowship at Trinity on the basis of a dissertation on Hegel's Logic. McTaggart had in the meantime been President of the Union Society, a debating club, and a member of the secretive Cambridge Apostles society. In 1897 he was appointed to a college lectureship in Philosophy, a position he would hold until his retirement in 1923 (although he continued to lecture until his death). He received the honorary degree Doctor of Letters from the university in May 1902.[7]

McTaggart, although radical in his youth, became increasingly conservative and was influential in the expulsion of Bertrand Russell from Trinity for pacifism during World War I. But McTaggart was a man of contradictions: despite his conservatism he was an advocate of women's suffrage, and though an atheist from his youth was a firm believer in human immortality and a defender of the Church of England. He had an encyclopaedic knowledge of English novels and eighteenth-century memoirs.

His honours included an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of St Andrews and Fellowship of the British Academy.

He died in London on 18 January 1925. In 1899 he had married Margaret Elizabeth Bird in New Zealand whom he met while visiting his mother (then living near New Plymouth, Taranaki) and was survived by her; the couple had no children.

Hegel scholarship edit

McTaggart's earlier work was devoted to an exposition and critique of Hegel's metaphysical methods and conclusions and their application in other fields. His first published work Studies in Hegelian Dialectic (1896), an expanded version of his Trinity fellowship dissertation, focused on the dialectical method of Hegel's Science of Logic. His second work Studies in Hegelian Cosmology (1901) is directed more towards a critique of the applications of Hegelian ideas made, both by Hegel and earlier neo-Hegelians, to the fields of ethics, politics and religion. In this book a number of his distinctive doctrines already appear, for example, his belief in human immortality. His final book specifically on Hegel was A Commentary on Hegel's "Logic" (1910), in which he attempted to explain and, to an extent, defend the argument of the Science of Logic.

Although he defended the dialectical method broadly construed and shared a similar outlook to Hegel, McTaggart's Hegelianism was not uncritical and he disagreed significantly both with Hegel himself and with earlier neo-Hegelians. He believed that many specific features of Hegel's argument were gravely flawed and was similarly disparaging of Hegel's application of his abstract thought. However, he by no means reached the same conclusions as the previous generations of British idealists and in his later work came to hold strikingly different and original views. Nonetheless, in spite of his break from earlier forms of Hegelianism, McTaggart inherited from his predecessors a pivotal belief in the ability of a priori thought to grasp the nature of the ultimate reality, which for him like earlier Hegelians was the absolute idea. Indeed, his later work and mature system can be seen as largely an attempt to give substance to his new conception of the absolute.

McTaggart's paradox edit

McTaggart is best known today for his attempt to prove that our concept of time involves a contradiction, and that therefore reality cannot be temporal. It follows that our perception of time is an illusion, and that time itself is merely ideal. His argument for this point is popularly known as McTaggart's paradox. The argument first appeared in the form of a journal article called "The Unreality of Time" (1908), but reappeared later as Chapter 33, 'Time', in the posthumously published Second Volume of his masterpiece The Nature of Existence, published in 1927. He introduced the notions of the "A series" and "B series", representing two different ways that events appear to have a position in time. The A series corresponds to our everyday notions of past, present, and future. The A series is "the series of positions running from the far past through the near past to the present, and then from the present to the near future and the far future" (p. 458). This is contrasted with the B series, in which positions are ordered from earlier-than to later-than relations. Thus the A series represent the events in time in a moving relation (from future to present to past) to the temporally moving observer, whereas the B series orders the time events as in firm and fixed relations to other time events.

McTaggart argued that the A series was a necessary component of any full theory of time since change only occurs in the A series, but that it was also self-contradictory and that our perception of time was, therefore, ultimately an incoherent illusion.

The necessity of the A series edit

The first, and longer, part of McTaggart's argument is his affirmative answer to the question "whether it is essential to the reality of time that its events should form an A series as well as a B series" (p. 458). Broadly, McTaggart argues that if events are not ordered by an A as well as a B series then there cannot be said to be change. At the centre of his argument is the example of the death of Queen Anne. This event is a death, it has certain causes and certain effects, it is later than the death of Queen Elizabeth etc., but none of these properties change over time. Only in one respect does the event change:

"It began by being a future event. It became every moment an event in the nearer future. At last it was a present event. Then it became past, and will always remain so, though every moment it becomes further and further past. Thus we seem forced to the conclusion that all change is only a change in the characteristics imparted to events by their presence in the A series" (p. 460).

This half of McTaggart's argument has, historically, received less attention than the second half.

The incoherence of the A series edit

McTaggart's attempted proof of the incoherence of the A series (the argument of pages 468–9) appears in the original paper only as a single part of a broader argument for this conclusion. According to the argument, the contradiction in our perception of time is that all events exemplify all three of the properties of the A-series, viz. being past, present and future. As McTaggart himself notes, the obvious response is that while exemplifying all three properties at some time, no event exemplifies all three at once, no event is past, present, and future. A single event is present, will have been future, will be past, and here there is, it seems, no contradiction. However, McTaggart argues that this response gives rise to a vicious circle and infinite regress. There is a vicious circle because the response requires us to invoke the A-series determinations of future, present, and past to explain how the events of the series do not exemplify those determinations simultaneously but successively. And there is a vicious regress because invoking tense to explain how different tenses are exemplified successively, gives rise to second order tenses that again are incompatible unless we again invoke tense to show how they are exemplified successively, etcetera ad infinitum. It bears mentioning that in the mature version of the argument McTaggart gave up the claim that there is a vicious circle, and only held that there is a vicious regress.[8]

One can convey the basic idea of the vicious regress in the following way. In order to avoid the initial apparent contradiction that events have incompatible tenses, one has to construe "a second A series, within which the first falls, in the same way in which events fall within the first" (p. 469). But even if the idea of a second A series within which the first falls makes sense (and McTaggart doubts it does, p. 469), it will face the same contradiction. And so, we must construct a third A series within which the second falls. And this will require the construction of a fourth A series and so on ad infinitum. At any given stage the contradiction will appear; however far we go in constructing A series, each A series will be, without reference to a further A series containing it, contradictory. One ought to conclude, McTaggart argues, that the A series is indeed contradictory and, therefore, does not exist.

Whether McTaggart's argument for the incoherence of the A series works or not, is one of the most hotly debated issues in the philosophy of time (see the entry for "The Unreality of Time" for a more thorough discussion).

Mature system: The Nature of Existence edit

In his later work, particularly his two-volume The Nature of Existence, McTaggart developed his own, highly original, metaphysical system. The most famous element is his defence of The Unreality of Time, but McTaggart's system was much broader. In The Nature of Existence McTaggart defended a similar Hegelian view of the universe to that of his earlier work on the basis not of Hegel's dialectics but rather in the mode of more modern metaphysics.

McTaggart concluded the world was composed of nothing but souls, each soul related to one or more of the others by love. He argued against belief in God since he denied the absolute any single personality (thereby justifying his atheism). His philosophy, however, was fundamentally optimistic. McTaggart believed each of the souls (which are identified with human beings) to be immortal and defended the idea of reincarnation. McTaggart held the view that all selves are unoriginated and indestructible.[9] The Nature of Existence also seeks to synthesise McTaggart's denial of the existence of time, matter etc. with their apparent existence.

Despite the mystical tone of its conclusions, the philosophical method of The Nature of Existence is far from mystical. McTaggart arrived at his conclusions by a careful analysis of the essential requirements of any successful metaphysical system (Volume I) followed by a purported proof that only his system satisfies these requirements (Volume II). The logical rigour of his system is in evidence, for example, in McTaggart's famous attempted proof of the unreality of time.

Influence edit

 
Depiction of John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart by Roger Fry

McTaggart was a friend and teacher of Bertrand Russell and G. E. Moore, and, according to Norbert Wiener,[10][11] the three were known as "The Mad Tea-Party of Trinity" (with McTaggart as the Dormouse). Along with Russell and Moore, McTaggart was a member of the Cambridge Apostles through which he would have a personal influence on an entire generation of writers and politicians (his involvement with the Apostles presumably overlapped with that of, among others, the members of the Bloomsbury group).

In particular, McTaggart was an early influence on Bertrand Russell. It was through McTaggart that the young Russell was converted to the prevalent Hegelianism of the day, and it was Russell's reaction against this Hegelianism that began the arc of his later work.

McTaggart was the most influential advocate of neo-Hegelian idealism in Cambridge at the time of Russell and Moore's reaction against it, as well as being a teacher and personal acquaintance of both men. With F. H. Bradley of Oxford he was, as the most prominent of the surviving British Idealists, the primary target of the new realists' assault. McTaggart's indirect influence was, therefore, very great. Given that modern analytic philosophy can arguably be traced to the work of Russell and Moore in this period, McTaggart's work retains interest to the historian of analytic philosophy despite being, in a very real sense, the product of an earlier age.

The Nature of Existence, with T. H. Green's Prolegomena to Ethics and Bradley's Appearance and Reality, marks the greatest achievement of British idealism, and McTaggart was the last major British Idealist of the classic period (for the later development of British idealism, see T. L. S. Sprigge).

McTaggart’s The Unreality of Time has been widely discussed in philosophical literature. Historian of philosophy Emily Thomas has commented that "philosophers have since written tens of thousands of pages about it. Twenty-first century thinkers have cited it more than 1,600 times so far – an extraordinary achievement for a vintage journal article".[12]

Select works edit

Books and monographs edit

Articles edit

  • 1892, "The Changes of Method in Hegel's Dialectic", Mind v.1, pp. 56–71 & 188–205.
  • 1895, "The Necessity of Dogma", International Journal of Ethics 5, pp. 147–16.
  • 1896, "Hegel's Theory of Punishment", International Journal of Ethics 6, pp. 479–502.
  • 1897, "Hegel's Treatment of the Categories of the Subjective Notion", Mind 6, pp. 164–181 & 342–358.
  • 1897, "The Conception of Society as an Organism", International Journal of Ethics 7, pp. 414–434.
  • 1900, "Hegel's Treatment of the Categories of the Idea", Mind 9, pp. 145–183.
  • 1904, "Human Pre-Existence", International Journal of Ethics, pp. 83–95.
  • 1902, "Hegel's Treatment of the Categories of Quality", Mind 11, pp. 503–526.
  • 1903, "Some Considerations Relating to Human Immortality", International Journal of Ethics 13, pp. 152–171
  • 1904, "Hegel's Treatment of the Categories of Quantity", Mind 13, pp. 180–203.
  • 1908, "The Unreality of Time", Mind 17, pp. 457–474.
  • 1908, "The Individualism of Value", International Journal of Ethics 18, pp. 433–445.
  • 1909, "The Relation of Time and Eternity", Mind 18, pp. 343–362.
  • 1915, "The Meaning of Causality", Mind 24, pp. 326–344.
  • 1923, "Propositions Applicable to Themselves", Mind 32, pp. 462–464.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pronounced /məkˈtæɡərt/.

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Truth and Hope by Peter Geach Archived 31 July 2012 at archive.today
  2. ^ "A Defense of McTaggart's Proof of the Unreality of Time" by Michael Dummett
  3. ^ Geach, Peter (October 1995). . Philosophy. Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Institute of Philosophy. 70 (274): 567–579. doi:10.1017/s0031819100065815. JSTOR 3751084. Archived from the original on 20 December 2002.
  4. ^ "Clifton College Register" Muirhead, J.A.O. p102: Bristol; J.W Arrowsmith for Old Cliftonian Society; April, 1948
  5. ^ "McTaggart, John McTaggart Ellis (MTGT885JM)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  6. ^ Broad, C.D., "John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart, 1866-1925," Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 13 (1927), pp. 307-334. Reprinted in Ethics and the history of philosophy, (1952) pp. 70-93.
  7. ^ "University intelligence". The Times. No. 36779. London. 28 May 1902. p. 12.
  8. ^ Ingthorsson, R. D. (2016). McTaggart's Paradox. New York: Routledge. p. 3. ISBN 9781138677241.
  9. ^ Patterson, Robert L. (1975). The Case for Immortality. International Journal for Philosophy of Religion. Vol. 6, No. 2. pp. 89-101.
  10. ^ N. Wiener. Ex-Prodigy: My Childhood and Youth. MIT Press, 1953, Ch. XIV.
  11. ^ The Annotated Alice: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll by Martin Gardner. New York, Bramhall House, 1960, comment to Ch. VII of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
  12. ^ Thomas, Emily. (2020). "Before, now, and next". Aeon. Retrieved 24 June 2021.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

  • John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart, by G. Lowes Dickinson, with chapters by Basil Williams & S.V. Keeling. Cambridge: At the University Press (1931).
  • An Examination of McTaggart's Philosophy, by C. D. Broad in two volumes, extracts from which are online: Volume 1 published 1933; Volume 2 published 1938 at Cambridge University Press.
  • Truth, Love and Immortality : An Introduction to McTaggart's Philosophy, by P. T. Geach. London: Hutchinson (1979).
  • "McTaggart, John McTaggart Ellis (1866–1925)", by Thomas Baldwin in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, ed. E. Craig (1998).
  • McTaggart's Paradox, by R. D. Ingthorsson. New York: Routledge (2016).

External links edit

  • McDaniel, Chris. "John M E McTaggart". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • "John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart" article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart: a bibliography. Provides full PDFs of all of McTaggart's writings.
  • Works by or about J. M. E. McTaggart at Internet Archive
  • Works by J. M. E. McTaggart at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • McTaggart and Metaphysics—Philosopher Rognvaldur Ingthorsson interviewed by Richard Marshall on McTaggart's causation and Idealism, action at a temporal distance, paradox of time and correspondence theory of truth and on "why we should heed the philosopher".
  • "McTaggart, John McTaggart Ellis (1866–1925"), Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart a FBA 3 September 1866 18 January 1925 was an English idealist metaphysician For most of his life McTaggart was a fellow and lecturer in philosophy at Trinity College Cambridge He was an exponent of the philosophy of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and among the most notable of the British idealists McTaggart is known for The Unreality of Time 1908 in which he argues that time is unreal The work has been widely discussed through the 20th century and into the 21st J M E McTaggartFBAPortrait by Walter Stoneman 1917BornJohn McTaggart Ellis3 September 1866London EnglandDied18 January 1925 1925 01 18 aged 58 London EnglandOther namesJohn McTaggart Ellis McTaggartAlma materTrinity College CambridgeSpouseMargaret Elizabeth Bird m 1899 wbr Era19th 20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolBritish idealismAcademic advisorsHenry SidgwickJames WardNotable studentsC D BroadMain interestsMetaphysicsethicsphilosophy of religionNotable ideasThe unreality of time A series and B series B theory of timeMcTaggart s paradoxMcTaggartian change Contents 1 Personal life 2 Hegel scholarship 3 McTaggart s paradox 3 1 The necessity of the A series 3 2 The incoherence of the A series 4 Mature system The Nature of Existence 5 Influence 6 Select works 6 1 Books and monographs 6 2 Articles 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksPersonal life editMcTaggart was born on 3 September 1866 in London to cousins Francis Ellis son of Thomas Flower Ellis and Caroline Ellis At birth he was named John McTaggart Ellis after his great uncle Sir John McTaggart Early in his life his family took the surname McTaggart as a condition of inheritance from that same uncle 3 McTaggart attended Clifton College Bristol 4 before going up to Trinity College Cambridge in 1885 5 At Trinity he was taught for the Moral Sciences Tripos by Henry Sidgwick and James Ward both distinguished philosophers After obtaining First class honours the only student of Moral Sciences to do so in 1888 6 he was in 1891 elected to a prize fellowship at Trinity on the basis of a dissertation on Hegel s Logic McTaggart had in the meantime been President of the Union Society a debating club and a member of the secretive Cambridge Apostles society In 1897 he was appointed to a college lectureship in Philosophy a position he would hold until his retirement in 1923 although he continued to lecture until his death He received the honorary degree Doctor of Letters from the university in May 1902 7 McTaggart although radical in his youth became increasingly conservative and was influential in the expulsion of Bertrand Russell from Trinity for pacifism during World War I But McTaggart was a man of contradictions despite his conservatism he was an advocate of women s suffrage and though an atheist from his youth was a firm believer in human immortality and a defender of the Church of England He had an encyclopaedic knowledge of English novels and eighteenth century memoirs His honours included an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of St Andrews and Fellowship of the British Academy He died in London on 18 January 1925 In 1899 he had married Margaret Elizabeth Bird in New Zealand whom he met while visiting his mother then living near New Plymouth Taranaki and was survived by her the couple had no children Hegel scholarship editMcTaggart s earlier work was devoted to an exposition and critique of Hegel s metaphysical methods and conclusions and their application in other fields His first published work Studies in Hegelian Dialectic 1896 an expanded version of his Trinity fellowship dissertation focused on the dialectical method of Hegel s Science of Logic His second work Studies in Hegelian Cosmology 1901 is directed more towards a critique of the applications of Hegelian ideas made both by Hegel and earlier neo Hegelians to the fields of ethics politics and religion In this book a number of his distinctive doctrines already appear for example his belief in human immortality His final book specifically on Hegel was A Commentary on Hegel s Logic 1910 in which he attempted to explain and to an extent defend the argument of the Science of Logic Although he defended the dialectical method broadly construed and shared a similar outlook to Hegel McTaggart s Hegelianism was not uncritical and he disagreed significantly both with Hegel himself and with earlier neo Hegelians He believed that many specific features of Hegel s argument were gravely flawed and was similarly disparaging of Hegel s application of his abstract thought However he by no means reached the same conclusions as the previous generations of British idealists and in his later work came to hold strikingly different and original views Nonetheless in spite of his break from earlier forms of Hegelianism McTaggart inherited from his predecessors a pivotal belief in the ability of a priori thought to grasp the nature of the ultimate reality which for him like earlier Hegelians was the absolute idea Indeed his later work and mature system can be seen as largely an attempt to give substance to his new conception of the absolute McTaggart s paradox editMcTaggart is best known today for his attempt to prove that our concept of time involves a contradiction and that therefore reality cannot be temporal It follows that our perception of time is an illusion and that time itself is merely ideal His argument for this point is popularly known as McTaggart s paradox The argument first appeared in the form of a journal article called The Unreality of Time 1908 but reappeared later as Chapter 33 Time in the posthumously published Second Volume of his masterpiece The Nature of Existence published in 1927 He introduced the notions of the A series and B series representing two different ways that events appear to have a position in time The A series corresponds to our everyday notions of past present and future The A series is the series of positions running from the far past through the near past to the present and then from the present to the near future and the far future p 458 This is contrasted with the B series in which positions are ordered from earlier than to later than relations Thus the A series represent the events in time in a moving relation from future to present to past to the temporally moving observer whereas the B series orders the time events as in firm and fixed relations to other time events McTaggart argued that the A series was a necessary component of any full theory of time since change only occurs in the A series but that it was also self contradictory and that our perception of time was therefore ultimately an incoherent illusion The necessity of the A series edit The first and longer part of McTaggart s argument is his affirmative answer to the question whether it is essential to the reality of time that its events should form an A series as well as a B series p 458 Broadly McTaggart argues that if events are not ordered by an A as well as a B series then there cannot be said to be change At the centre of his argument is the example of the death of Queen Anne This event is a death it has certain causes and certain effects it is later than the death of Queen Elizabeth etc but none of these properties change over time Only in one respect does the event change It began by being a future event It became every moment an event in the nearer future At last it was a present event Then it became past and will always remain so though every moment it becomes further and further past Thus we seem forced to the conclusion that all change is only a change in the characteristics imparted to events by their presence in the A series p 460 This half of McTaggart s argument has historically received less attention than the second half The incoherence of the A series edit McTaggart s attempted proof of the incoherence of the A series the argument of pages 468 9 appears in the original paper only as a single part of a broader argument for this conclusion According to the argument the contradiction in our perception of time is that all events exemplify all three of the properties of the A series viz being past present and future As McTaggart himself notes the obvious response is that while exemplifying all three properties at some time no event exemplifies all three at once no event is past present and future A single event is present will have been future will be past and here there is it seems no contradiction However McTaggart argues that this response gives rise to a vicious circle and infinite regress There is a vicious circle because the response requires us to invoke the A series determinations of future present and past to explain how the events of the series do not exemplify those determinations simultaneously but successively And there is a vicious regress because invoking tense to explain how different tenses are exemplified successively gives rise to second order tenses that again are incompatible unless we again invoke tense to show how they are exemplified successively etcetera ad infinitum It bears mentioning that in the mature version of the argument McTaggart gave up the claim that there is a vicious circle and only held that there is a vicious regress 8 One can convey the basic idea of the vicious regress in the following way In order to avoid the initial apparent contradiction that events have incompatible tenses one has to construe a second A series within which the first falls in the same way in which events fall within the first p 469 But even if the idea of a second A series within which the first falls makes sense and McTaggart doubts it does p 469 it will face the same contradiction And so we must construct a third A series within which the second falls And this will require the construction of a fourth A series and so on ad infinitum At any given stage the contradiction will appear however far we go in constructing A series each A series will be without reference to a further A series containing it contradictory One ought to conclude McTaggart argues that the A series is indeed contradictory and therefore does not exist Whether McTaggart s argument for the incoherence of the A series works or not is one of the most hotly debated issues in the philosophy of time see the entry for The Unreality of Time for a more thorough discussion Mature system The Nature of Existence editIn his later work particularly his two volume The Nature of Existence McTaggart developed his own highly original metaphysical system The most famous element is his defence of The Unreality of Time but McTaggart s system was much broader In The Nature of Existence McTaggart defended a similar Hegelian view of the universe to that of his earlier work on the basis not of Hegel s dialectics but rather in the mode of more modern metaphysics McTaggart concluded the world was composed of nothing but souls each soul related to one or more of the others by love He argued against belief in God since he denied the absolute any single personality thereby justifying his atheism His philosophy however was fundamentally optimistic McTaggart believed each of the souls which are identified with human beings to be immortal and defended the idea of reincarnation McTaggart held the view that all selves are unoriginated and indestructible 9 The Nature of Existence also seeks to synthesise McTaggart s denial of the existence of time matter etc with their apparent existence Despite the mystical tone of its conclusions the philosophical method of The Nature of Existence is far from mystical McTaggart arrived at his conclusions by a careful analysis of the essential requirements of any successful metaphysical system Volume I followed by a purported proof that only his system satisfies these requirements Volume II The logical rigour of his system is in evidence for example in McTaggart s famous attempted proof of the unreality of time Influence edit nbsp Depiction of John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart by Roger FryMcTaggart was a friend and teacher of Bertrand Russell and G E Moore and according to Norbert Wiener 10 11 the three were known as The Mad Tea Party of Trinity with McTaggart as the Dormouse Along with Russell and Moore McTaggart was a member of the Cambridge Apostles through which he would have a personal influence on an entire generation of writers and politicians his involvement with the Apostles presumably overlapped with that of among others the members of the Bloomsbury group In particular McTaggart was an early influence on Bertrand Russell It was through McTaggart that the young Russell was converted to the prevalent Hegelianism of the day and it was Russell s reaction against this Hegelianism that began the arc of his later work McTaggart was the most influential advocate of neo Hegelian idealism in Cambridge at the time of Russell and Moore s reaction against it as well as being a teacher and personal acquaintance of both men With F H Bradley of Oxford he was as the most prominent of the surviving British Idealists the primary target of the new realists assault McTaggart s indirect influence was therefore very great Given that modern analytic philosophy can arguably be traced to the work of Russell and Moore in this period McTaggart s work retains interest to the historian of analytic philosophy despite being in a very real sense the product of an earlier age The Nature of Existence with T H Green s Prolegomena to Ethics and Bradley s Appearance and Reality marks the greatest achievement of British idealism and McTaggart was the last major British Idealist of the classic period for the later development of British idealism see T L S Sprigge McTaggart s The Unreality of Time has been widely discussed in philosophical literature Historian of philosophy Emily Thomas has commented that philosophers have since written tens of thousands of pages about it Twenty first century thinkers have cited it more than 1 600 times so far an extraordinary achievement for a vintage journal article 12 Select works editBooks and monographs edit 1893 The Further Determination of the Absolute privately printed 1896 Studies in the Hegelian Dialectic Cambridge University Press 1901 Studies in Hegelian Cosmology Cambridge University Press revised second edition 1918 1906 Some Dogmas of Religion London Arnold 1910 A Commentary on Hegel s Logic Cambridge University Press 1916 Human Immortality and Pre existence London Arnold 1921 27 The Nature of Existence in two volumes Cambridge University Press Volume 1 idem 1921 Volume 2 idem 1927 1934 Philosophical studies edited with an introduction by S V Keeling London Arnold Articles edit 1892 The Changes of Method in Hegel s Dialectic Mind v 1 pp 56 71 amp 188 205 1895 The Necessity of Dogma International Journal of Ethics 5 pp 147 16 1896 Hegel s Theory of Punishment International Journal of Ethics 6 pp 479 502 1897 Hegel s Treatment of the Categories of the Subjective Notion Mind 6 pp 164 181 amp 342 358 1897 The Conception of Society as an Organism International Journal of Ethics 7 pp 414 434 1900 Hegel s Treatment of the Categories of the Idea Mind 9 pp 145 183 1904 Human Pre Existence International Journal of Ethics pp 83 95 1902 Hegel s Treatment of the Categories of Quality Mind 11 pp 503 526 1903 Some Considerations Relating to Human Immortality International Journal of Ethics 13 pp 152 171 1904 Hegel s Treatment of the Categories of Quantity Mind 13 pp 180 203 1908 The Unreality of Time Mind 17 pp 457 474 1908 The Individualism of Value International Journal of Ethics 18 pp 433 445 1909 The Relation of Time and Eternity Mind 18 pp 343 362 1915 The Meaning of Causality Mind 24 pp 326 344 1923 Propositions Applicable to Themselves Mind 32 pp 462 464 Notes edit Pronounced m e k ˈ t ae ɡ er t References editFootnotes edit Truth and Hope by Peter Geach Archived 31 July 2012 at archive today A Defense of McTaggart s Proof of the Unreality of Time by Michael Dummett Geach Peter October 1995 Cambridge Philosophers III McTaggart Philosophy Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Institute of Philosophy 70 274 567 579 doi 10 1017 s0031819100065815 JSTOR 3751084 Archived from the original on 20 December 2002 Clifton College Register Muirhead J A O p102 Bristol J W Arrowsmith for Old Cliftonian Society April 1948 McTaggart John McTaggart Ellis MTGT885JM A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Broad C D John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart 1866 1925 Proceedings of the British Academy vol 13 1927 pp 307 334 Reprinted in Ethics and the history of philosophy 1952 pp 70 93 University intelligence The Times No 36779 London 28 May 1902 p 12 Ingthorsson R D 2016 McTaggart s Paradox New York Routledge p 3 ISBN 9781138677241 Patterson Robert L 1975 The Case for Immortality International Journal for Philosophy of Religion Vol 6 No 2 pp 89 101 N Wiener Ex Prodigy My Childhood and Youth MIT Press 1953 Ch XIV The Annotated Alice Alice s Adventures in Wonderland amp Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll by Martin Gardner New York Bramhall House 1960 comment to Ch VII of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Thomas Emily 2020 Before now and next Aeon Retrieved 24 June 2021 Works cited edit McTaggart John McTaggart Ellis 1866 1925 by C D Broad revised C A Creffield Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 1921 amp 1927 The Nature of Existence Volumes 1 amp 2 Cambridge At the University Press Further reading editJohn McTaggart Ellis McTaggart by G Lowes Dickinson with chapters by Basil Williams amp S V Keeling Cambridge At the University Press 1931 An Examination of McTaggart s Philosophy by C D Broad in two volumes extracts from which are online Volume 1 published 1933 Volume 2 published 1938 at Cambridge University Press Truth Love and Immortality An Introduction to McTaggart s Philosophy by P T Geach London Hutchinson 1979 McTaggart John McTaggart Ellis 1866 1925 by Thomas Baldwin in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy ed E Craig 1998 McTaggart s Paradox by R D Ingthorsson New York Routledge 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to J M E McTaggart nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about J M E McTaggart McDaniel Chris John M E McTaggart In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy John McTaggart Ellis McTaggart a bibliography Provides full PDFs of all of McTaggart s writings Works by or about J M E McTaggart at Internet Archive Works by J M E McTaggart at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp McTaggart and Metaphysics Philosopher Rognvaldur Ingthorsson interviewed by Richard Marshall on McTaggart s causation and Idealism action at a temporal distance paradox of time and correspondence theory of truth and on why we should heed the philosopher McTaggart John McTaggart Ellis 1866 1925 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J M E McTaggart amp oldid 1175075277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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