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José Ferrater Mora

José María Ferrater Mora (Catalan: Josep Ferrater i Mora; 30 October 1912 – 30 January 1991) was a Spanish philosopher, essayist and writer. He is considered the most prominent Catalan philosopher of the 20th-century[1] and was the author of over 35 books, including a four-volume Diccionario de filosofía (Dictionary of Philosophy, 1941) and Being and Death: An Outline of Integrationist Philosophy (1962).[2] Subjects he worked on include ontology, history of philosophy, metaphysics, anthropology, the philosophy of history and culture, epistemology, logic, philosophy of science, and ethics. He also directed several films.[3]

José Ferrater Mora
Josep Ferrater i Mora
Born(1912-10-30)30 October 1912
Barcelona, Spain
Died30 January 1991(1991-01-30) (aged 78)
Barcelona, Spain
EducationUniversity of Barcelona (BA, 1932; BPhil, 1936)
Spouse
(m. 1980)
AwardsGrand Cross of the Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise (1984)
Creu de Sant Jordi (1984)
Prince of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities (1985)
Era20th-century philosophy
InstitutionsBryn Mawr College
Doctoral studentsPriscilla Cohn
Other notable studentsJavier Muguerza, Shaun Gallagher
LanguageSpanish, Catalan, English
Main interests
Applied ethics, animal ethics, metaphysics
Notable ideas
Integrationism, monism sui generis

Ferrater Mora was known for his inclusion of humans and non-human animals within the same moral sphere, or continuum, arguing that the difference was one of degree, not kind.

Biography edit

Ferrater Mora was born in 1912, in Barcelona, Spain. He studied at Santa Maria del Collell, then at the University of Barcelona, where he earned a BA, in 1932, and his BPhil, in 1936.[1]

During the Spanish Civil War, he enlisted in the Republican Army, serving as an intelligence clerk, before escaping the country in 1939. In exile, he spent three months in Paris, before moving to and lecturing in Havana, Cuba, and Santiago, Chile.[1]

After receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship, he moved to the United States, first residing in New York City.[4] In 1949, Ferrater Mora was hired by Bryn Mawr College to teach philosophy and Spanish literature, where he worked till his retirement, in 1981.[1] He married Priscilla Cohn (his former doctoral student) in 1980.[5]

Ferrater Mora died from a heart attack, on 30 January 1991, while visiting Barcelona.[6]

Philosophy edit

Ferrater Mora is the creator of a philosophical method he called integrationism, with which he sought to integrate opposite systems of thought. He argued that irreducible concepts, which are the source of many disputes and divisions in philosophy, do not denote existing realities in themselves but are "limit concepts"; that is to say, these "opposite poles" do not exist absolutely. They exist only as trends or directions of reality and therefore are complementary and are useful to talk about it.[7]

His philosophical work also focused on questions of an ontological nature. He called his ontological position "monism sui generis", since it unites monism and pluralism; it is an emergentism in which the elements assemble themselves by virtue of their properties or functions, or properties-functions. Each structure, although it depends to exist on the elements that compose it, is not reducible to them because it acquires new properties-functions that cannot be explained based on those of the element. The structure also becomes an element for a new structure. Self-assembly begins from the physical level to the point where structures acquire more complex properties-functions and of a different order to give rise to a new biological level, and thus the continuum progresses until reaching the social and then the cultural level. It is a continuum that does not break and that goes from matter to reason.[8]

He was one of the first philosophers to introduce applied ethics to the Spanish-speaking world and was a staunch supporter of animal rights.[9]

His works combine a wide variety of influences, including the Spanish philosophers Miguel de Unamuno, Eugenio d'Ors and José Ortega y Gasset and numerous other representatives of both continental and analytic philosophy.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

In January 1991, Ferrater Mora made public the decision to donate his personal library to the University of Girona. The collection consists of 7,255 books, 156 journal titles and correspondence, with 6,748 letters.[10] The correspondence includes letters between Ferrater Mora and his friends, politicians and intellectuals of the time. This collection also includes letters from his departure into exile in the 1940s (Cuba, Chile and the United States), until his death in 1991. Other documents of interest include related writings, with politics and culture sent by personalities of the time: Xavier Benguerel, Enrique Tierno Galván, Néstor Almendros and Josep Trueta, among many others.[11]

Founded in 1989, the Ferrater Mora Chair in Contemporary Thought, regularly organizes seminars and lessons on contemporary philosophy.[10]

The Ferrater Mora Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics is named in his honour.[2]

Selected works edit

The following works are in Spanish, unless otherwise noted:

  • Dictionary of Philosophy (Mexico: Atlante, 1941)
  • Spain and Europe (Santiago de Chile: Cruz del Sur, 1942)
  • The Forms of Catalan Life (Santiago de Chile: Agrupació Patriòtica Catalana, 1944), in Catalan and Spanish
  • Unamuno: Outline of a Philosophy (Buenos Aires: Losada, 1944)
  • Four Visions of Universal History (Buenos Aires: Losada, 1945)
  • Spanish Issues (Mexico: Colegio de México, 1945)
  • Variations on the Spirit (Buenos Aires: South American, 1945)
  • The Irony, the Death and the Admiration (Santiago de Chile: Cruz del Sur, 1946)
  • The Meaning of Death (Buenos Aires: South American, 1947)
  • The Book of Meaning (Santiago de Chile: Pi de les Tres Branques, 1948), in Catalan
  • Hellenism and Christianity (Santiago de Chile: University of Chile, 1949)
  • The Man at the Crossroads (Buenos Aires: South American, 1952)
  • Disputed Questions: Essays on Philosophy (Madrid: Revista de Occidente, 1955)
  • Mathematical Logic (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1955), co-authored with Hugues Leblanc
  • Ortega y Gasset: An Outline of His Philosophy (London: Bowes and New Haven: Yale University, 1957), in English
  • What Is Logic (Buenos Aires: Columba, 1957)
  • Philosophy in Today's World (Madrid: Revista de Occidente, 1959)
  • Being and Death: Outline of Integrationist Philosophy (Madrid: Aguilar, 1962)
  • Three Worlds: Catalonia, Spain, Europe (Barcelona and Buenos Aires: EDHASA, 1963)
  • Being and Meaning (Madrid: Revista de Occidente, 1967)
  • Inquiries About Language (Madrid: Alianza, 1970)
  • Words and Men (Barcelona: 62, 1970), in Catalan
  • Man and His Environment and Other Essays (Madrid: Siglo Veintiuno, 1971)
  • Shift in Philosophy (Madrid: Alianza, 1974)
  • Cinema Without Philosophies (Madrid: Esti-Arte, 1974)
  • From Matter to Reason (Madrid: Alianza, 1979)
  • Seven Capital Stories (Barcelona: Planeta, 1979)
  • Applied Ethics: From Abortion to Violence (Madrid: Alianza, 1981), co-authored with Priscilla Cohn
  • Claudia, My Claudia (Madrid: Alianza, 1982)
  • The World of the Writer (Barcelona: Crítica, 1983)
  • Ways of Doing Philosophy (Barcelona: Crítica, 1985)
  • Voltaire in New York (Madrid: Alianza, 1985)
  • Foundations of Philosophy (Madrid: Alianza, 1985)
  • Made in Corona (Madrid: Alianza, 1986)
  • Window to the World (Barcelona: Crítica, 1986)
  • Dictionary of Great Philosophers 2 (Madrid: Alianza, 1986)
  • The Truth Game (Barcelona: Ediciones Destino, 1988)
  • Return from Hell (Barcelona: Anthropos, 1989)
  • Miss Goldie (Barcelona: Seix Barral, 1991)
  • Women on the Verge of Legend (Barcelona: Círculo de readers, 1991)
  • Butterflies and Superstrings: Dictionary for Our Time (Barcelona: Peninsula, 1994)

Awards edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Shook, John R., ed. (2005). "Ferrater Mora, José María". Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers. London: A & C Black. pp. 766–768. ISBN 978-1-84371-037-0.
  2. ^ a b "José Ferrater Mora". Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  3. ^ "The Movie Maker: A Brief History and Analysis of Ferrater Mora's Films". Ferrater Mora. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  4. ^ Mora, Jose Ferrater (2003). Terricabras, J. M. (ed.). Three Spanish Philosophers: Unamuno, Ortega, Ferrater Mora. Albany, New York: SUNY Press. pp. 257–258. ISBN 978-0-7914-5714-6.
  5. ^ Cook, Bonnie L. (2 July 2019). "Priscilla T. Neuman Cohn Ferrater Mora, 85, heiress who became philosophy professor, animal-rights activist". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  6. ^ "Jose F. Mora, 78, Dies; Professor of Philosophy". The New York Times. 2 February 1991. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  7. ^ Needleman, Jacob (1967). "Being and Death: An Outline of Integrationist Philosophy (review)" (PDF). Journal of the History of Philosophy. 5 (3): 309–311. doi:10.1353/hph.2008.1359. ISSN 1538-4586. S2CID 143916072.
  8. ^ Maestre, Begoña Román (2014). "Oscar Horta, La filosofia moral de Josep Ferrater Mora Documenta Universitària, Girona, 2008". Journal of catalan intellectual history: Revista d'història de la filosofia catalana (7–8): 163–166. ISSN 2014-1564.
  9. ^ Horta, Óscar (2008). La filosofía moral de J. Ferrater Mora. Girona: Documenta Universitaria.
  10. ^ a b "Josep Ferrater Mora". Universitat of Girona (in Catalan). Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  11. ^ "Epistolari del Llegat Ferrater Mora". University of Girona. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  12. ^ a b "Awards, Honors, Distinctions and Decorations". Ferrater Mora. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  13. ^ a b c "José Ferrater Mora". Real Academia de la Historia (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 June 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Horta, Óscar. La filosofía moral de J. Ferrater Mora. Documenta Universitaria, Girona, 2008.

External links edit

  • Works by José Ferrater Mora at Internet Archive
  • Josep Ferrater Mora Foundation
  • Ferrater Mora Collection (University of Girona Library)
  • Ferrater Mora Correspondence in the University of Girona DUGi Repository
  • Los derechos de los animales ("Animal rights"; the first essay on animal rights published in Spain)

josé, ferrater, mora, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, ferrater, second, maternal, family, name, mora, josé, maría, ferrater, mora, catalan, josep, ferrater, mora, october, 1912, january, 1991, spanish, philosopher, essayist, writer, considered, . In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Ferrater and the second or maternal family name is Mora Jose Maria Ferrater Mora Catalan Josep Ferrater i Mora 30 October 1912 30 January 1991 was a Spanish philosopher essayist and writer He is considered the most prominent Catalan philosopher of the 20th century 1 and was the author of over 35 books including a four volume Diccionario de filosofia Dictionary of Philosophy 1941 and Being and Death An Outline of Integrationist Philosophy 1962 2 Subjects he worked on include ontology history of philosophy metaphysics anthropology the philosophy of history and culture epistemology logic philosophy of science and ethics He also directed several films 3 Jose Ferrater MoraJosep Ferrater i MoraBorn 1912 10 30 30 October 1912Barcelona SpainDied30 January 1991 1991 01 30 aged 78 Barcelona SpainEducationUniversity of Barcelona BA 1932 BPhil 1936 SpousePriscilla Cohn m 1980 wbr AwardsGrand Cross of the Civil Order of Alfonso X the Wise 1984 Creu de Sant Jordi 1984 Prince of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities 1985 Era20th century philosophyInstitutionsBryn Mawr CollegeDoctoral studentsPriscilla CohnOther notable studentsJavier Muguerza Shaun GallagherLanguageSpanish Catalan EnglishMain interestsApplied ethics animal ethics metaphysicsNotable ideasIntegrationism monism sui generis Ferrater Mora was known for his inclusion of humans and non human animals within the same moral sphere or continuum arguing that the difference was one of degree not kind Contents 1 Biography 2 Philosophy 3 Legacy 4 Selected works 5 Awards 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography editFerrater Mora was born in 1912 in Barcelona Spain He studied at Santa Maria del Collell then at the University of Barcelona where he earned a BA in 1932 and his BPhil in 1936 1 During the Spanish Civil War he enlisted in the Republican Army serving as an intelligence clerk before escaping the country in 1939 In exile he spent three months in Paris before moving to and lecturing in Havana Cuba and Santiago Chile 1 After receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship he moved to the United States first residing in New York City 4 In 1949 Ferrater Mora was hired by Bryn Mawr College to teach philosophy and Spanish literature where he worked till his retirement in 1981 1 He married Priscilla Cohn his former doctoral student in 1980 5 Ferrater Mora died from a heart attack on 30 January 1991 while visiting Barcelona 6 Philosophy editFerrater Mora is the creator of a philosophical method he called integrationism with which he sought to integrate opposite systems of thought He argued that irreducible concepts which are the source of many disputes and divisions in philosophy do not denote existing realities in themselves but are limit concepts that is to say these opposite poles do not exist absolutely They exist only as trends or directions of reality and therefore are complementary and are useful to talk about it 7 His philosophical work also focused on questions of an ontological nature He called his ontological position monism sui generis since it unites monism and pluralism it is an emergentism in which the elements assemble themselves by virtue of their properties or functions or properties functions Each structure although it depends to exist on the elements that compose it is not reducible to them because it acquires new properties functions that cannot be explained based on those of the element The structure also becomes an element for a new structure Self assembly begins from the physical level to the point where structures acquire more complex properties functions and of a different order to give rise to a new biological level and thus the continuum progresses until reaching the social and then the cultural level It is a continuum that does not break and that goes from matter to reason 8 He was one of the first philosophers to introduce applied ethics to the Spanish speaking world and was a staunch supporter of animal rights 9 His works combine a wide variety of influences including the Spanish philosophers Miguel de Unamuno Eugenio d Ors and Jose Ortega y Gasset and numerous other representatives of both continental and analytic philosophy citation needed Legacy editIn January 1991 Ferrater Mora made public the decision to donate his personal library to the University of Girona The collection consists of 7 255 books 156 journal titles and correspondence with 6 748 letters 10 The correspondence includes letters between Ferrater Mora and his friends politicians and intellectuals of the time This collection also includes letters from his departure into exile in the 1940s Cuba Chile and the United States until his death in 1991 Other documents of interest include related writings with politics and culture sent by personalities of the time Xavier Benguerel Enrique Tierno Galvan Nestor Almendros and Josep Trueta among many others 11 Founded in 1989 the Ferrater Mora Chair in Contemporary Thought regularly organizes seminars and lessons on contemporary philosophy 10 The Ferrater Mora Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics is named in his honour 2 Selected works editThe following works are in Spanish unless otherwise noted Dictionary of Philosophy Mexico Atlante 1941 Spain and Europe Santiago de Chile Cruz del Sur 1942 The Forms of Catalan Life Santiago de Chile Agrupacio Patriotica Catalana 1944 in Catalan and Spanish Unamuno Outline of a Philosophy Buenos Aires Losada 1944 Four Visions of Universal History Buenos Aires Losada 1945 Spanish Issues Mexico Colegio de Mexico 1945 Variations on the Spirit Buenos Aires South American 1945 The Irony the Death and the Admiration Santiago de Chile Cruz del Sur 1946 The Meaning of Death Buenos Aires South American 1947 The Book of Meaning Santiago de Chile Pi de les Tres Branques 1948 in Catalan Hellenism and Christianity Santiago de Chile University of Chile 1949 The Man at the Crossroads Buenos Aires South American 1952 Disputed Questions Essays on Philosophy Madrid Revista de Occidente 1955 Mathematical Logic Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 1955 co authored with Hugues Leblanc Ortega y Gasset An Outline of His Philosophy London Bowes and New Haven Yale University 1957 in English What Is Logic Buenos Aires Columba 1957 Philosophy in Today s World Madrid Revista de Occidente 1959 Being and Death Outline of Integrationist Philosophy Madrid Aguilar 1962 Three Worlds Catalonia Spain Europe Barcelona and Buenos Aires EDHASA 1963 Being and Meaning Madrid Revista de Occidente 1967 Inquiries About Language Madrid Alianza 1970 Words and Men Barcelona 62 1970 in Catalan Man and His Environment and Other Essays Madrid Siglo Veintiuno 1971 Shift in Philosophy Madrid Alianza 1974 Cinema Without Philosophies Madrid Esti Arte 1974 From Matter to Reason Madrid Alianza 1979 Seven Capital Stories Barcelona Planeta 1979 Applied Ethics From Abortion to Violence Madrid Alianza 1981 co authored with Priscilla Cohn Claudia My Claudia Madrid Alianza 1982 The World of the Writer Barcelona Critica 1983 Ways of Doing Philosophy Barcelona Critica 1985 Voltaire in New York Madrid Alianza 1985 Foundations of Philosophy Madrid Alianza 1985 Made in Corona Madrid Alianza 1986 Window to the World Barcelona Critica 1986 Dictionary of Great Philosophers 2 Madrid Alianza 1986 The Truth Game Barcelona Ediciones Destino 1988 Return from Hell Barcelona Anthropos 1989 Miss Goldie Barcelona Seix Barral 1991 Women on the Verge of Legend Barcelona Circulo de readers 1991 Butterflies and Superstrings Dictionary for Our Time Barcelona Peninsula 1994 Awards editFerrater Mora received honorary degrees from the following universities the Autonomous University of Barcelona Spain 1979 the University of the Republic Uruguay 1983 the National University of Tucuman Argentina 1983 the National University of Colombia 1983 the National University of Distance Education Spain 1986 the National University of Salta Argentina 1986 the National University of Cuyo Argentina 1988 the University of Barcelona 1988 and the University of Santiago de Compostela posthumous Spain 1991 12 In 1982 he was awarded the Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic 13 In 1984 he was awarded the Creu de Sant Jordi of the Generalitat de Catalunya and the Grand Cross of the Civil Order of Alfonso X the Wise 13 In 1985 he was awarded the Prince of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities 13 In addition to being a numerus clausus member of the International Institute of Philosophy and various academic societies he belonged to the North American Academy of the Spanish Language 12 See also editList of animal rights advocatesReferences edit a b c d Shook John R ed 2005 Ferrater Mora Jose Maria Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers London A amp C Black pp 766 768 ISBN 978 1 84371 037 0 a b Jose Ferrater Mora Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics Retrieved 10 July 2020 The Movie Maker A Brief History and Analysis of Ferrater Mora s Films Ferrater Mora Retrieved 24 June 2020 Mora Jose Ferrater 2003 Terricabras J M ed Three Spanish Philosophers Unamuno Ortega Ferrater Mora Albany New York SUNY Press pp 257 258 ISBN 978 0 7914 5714 6 Cook Bonnie L 2 July 2019 Priscilla T Neuman Cohn Ferrater Mora 85 heiress who became philosophy professor animal rights activist The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 23 June 2020 Jose F Mora 78 Dies Professor of Philosophy The New York Times 2 February 1991 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 June 2020 Needleman Jacob 1967 Being and Death An Outline of Integrationist Philosophy review PDF Journal of the History of Philosophy 5 3 309 311 doi 10 1353 hph 2008 1359 ISSN 1538 4586 S2CID 143916072 Maestre Begona Roman 2014 Oscar Horta La filosofia moral de Josep Ferrater Mora Documenta Universitaria Girona 2008 Journal of catalan intellectual history Revista d historia de la filosofia catalana 7 8 163 166 ISSN 2014 1564 Horta oscar 2008 La filosofia moral de J Ferrater Mora Girona Documenta Universitaria a b Josep Ferrater Mora Universitat of Girona in Catalan Retrieved 24 June 2020 Epistolari del Llegat Ferrater Mora University of Girona Retrieved 24 June 2020 a b Awards Honors Distinctions and Decorations Ferrater Mora Retrieved 24 June 2020 a b c Jose Ferrater Mora Real Academia de la Historia in Spanish Retrieved 24 June 2020 Further reading editHorta oscar La filosofia moral de J Ferrater Mora Documenta Universitaria Girona 2008 External links editWorks by Jose Ferrater Mora at Internet Archive Josep Ferrater Mora Foundation Ferrater Mora Collection University of Girona Library Ferrater Mora Correspondence in the University of Girona DUGi Repository Los derechos de los animales Animal rights the first essay on animal rights published in Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jose Ferrater Mora amp oldid 1194503582, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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