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Mortimer J. Adler

Mortimer Jerome Adler (December 28, 1902 – June 28, 2001) was an American philosopher, educator, encyclopedist, and popular author. As a philosopher he worked within the Aristotelian and Thomistic traditions. He taught at Columbia University and the University of Chicago, served as chairman of the Encyclopædia Britannica board of editors, and founded the Institute for Philosophical Research.

Mortimer J. Adler
Adler while presiding over the Center for the Study of The Great Ideas
Born
Mortimer Jerome Adler

(1902-12-28)December 28, 1902
New York City, U.S.
DiedJune 28, 2001(2001-06-28) (aged 98)
EducationColumbia University (PhD)
Notable workAristotle for Everybody, How to Read a Book, A Syntopicon
Spouses
  • Helen Leavenworth Boynton
    (m. 1927; div. 1960)
  • Caroline Sage Pring
    (m. 1963; died 1998)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Main interests
Philosophical theology, metaphysics, ethics

He lived for long stretches in New York City, Chicago, San Francisco, and San Mateo, California.[1]

Biography Edit

Intellectual development and philosophic evolution Edit

While doing newspaper work and taking night classes during his adolescence, Adler encountered works of men he would come to call heroes: Plato, Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, John Locke, John Stuart Mill, and others, who "were assailed as irrelevant by student activists in the 1960s and subjected to 'politically correct' attack in later decades."[2] His thought evolved toward the correction of what he considered "philosophical mistakes", as reflected in his 1985 book Ten Philosophical Mistakes: Basic Errors in Modern Thought.[3] In Adler's view, these errors were introduced by Descartes on the continent and by Thomas Hobbes and David Hume in Britain, and were caused by a "culpable ignorance" about Aristotle by those who rejected the conclusions of dogmatic philosophy without acknowledging its sound classical premises. These modern errors were compounded and perpetuated by Kant and the idealists and existentialists on the one side, and by John Stuart Mill, Jeremy Bentham, and Bertrand Russell and the English analytic tradition on the other, according to Adler. He corrected these mistakes, at least to his own satisfaction, with reference to insights and distinctions drawn from the Aristotelian tradition.

New York City Edit

Adler was born in Manhattan, New York City, on December 28, 1902, to Jewish immigrants from Germany: Clarissa (Manheim), a schoolteacher, and Ignatz Adler, a jewelry salesman.[4][5] He dropped out of school at age 14 to become a copy boy for the New York Sun, with the ultimate aspiration of becoming a journalist.[6] Adler soon returned to school to take writing classes at night, where he discovered the western philosophical tradition. After his early schooling and work, he went on to study at Columbia University and contributed to the student literary magazine, The Morningside, a poem "Choice" (in 1922 when Charles A. Wagner[7] was editor-in-chief and Whittaker Chambers an associate editor).[8] Though he refused to take the required swimming test for a bachelor's degree (a matter that was rectified when Columbia gave him an honorary degree in 1983), he stayed at the university and eventually received an instructorship and finally a doctorate in psychology.[9] While at Columbia University, Adler wrote his first book: Dialectic, published in 1927.[10]

Adler worked with Scott Buchanan at the People's Institute and then for many years on their respective Great Books efforts. (Buchanan was the founder of the Great Books program at St. John's College).[11]

Chicago Edit

In 1930, Robert Hutchins, the newly appointed president of the University of Chicago, whom Adler had befriended some years earlier, arranged for Chicago's law school to hire him as a professor of the philosophy of law. The philosophers at Chicago (who included James H. Tufts, E. A. Burtt, and George H. Mead) had "entertained grave doubts as to Dr. Adler's competence in the field [of philosophy]"[12] and resisted Adler's appointment to the university's Department of Philosophy.[13][14] Adler was the first "non-lawyer" to join the law school faculty.[15] After the Great Books seminar inspired Chicago businessman and university trustee Walter Paepcke to found the Aspen Institute, Adler taught philosophy to business executives there.[10][16]

Popular appeal Edit

Adler long strove to bring philosophy to the masses, and some of his works (such as How to Read a Book) became popular bestsellers. He was also an advocate of economic democracy and wrote an influential preface to Louis O. Kelso's The Capitalist Manifesto.[17] Adler was often aided in his thinking and writing by Arthur Rubin, an old friend from his Columbia undergraduate days. In his own words:

Unlike many of my contemporaries, I never write books for my fellow professors to read. I have no interest in the academic audience at all. I'm interested in Joe Doakes. A general audience can read any book I write – and they do.

Dwight Macdonald once criticized Adler's popular style by saying "Mr. Adler once wrote a book called How to Read a Book. He should now read a book called How to Write a Book."[18]

Encyclopedia and Educational Reform Edit

Adler and Hutchins went on to found the Great Books of the Western World program and the Great Books Foundation. In 1952, Adler founded and served as director of the Institute for Philosophical Research. He also served on the Board of Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica, compiled its Syntopicon and later Propaedia, and succeeded Hutchins as its chairman from 1974. As the director of editorial planning for the fifteenth edition of Britannica from 1965, he was instrumental in the major reorganization of knowledge embodied in that edition.[19] He introduced the Paideia Proposal which resulted in his founding the Paideia Program, a grade school curriculum centered around guided reading and discussion of difficult works (as judged for each grade). With Max Weismann, he founded the Center for the Study of the Great Ideas in 1990 in Chicago.

Religion and theology Edit

Adler was born into a nonobservant Jewish family. In his early twenties, he discovered St. Thomas Aquinas, and in particular the Summa Theologica.[20] Many years later, he wrote that its "intellectual austerity, integrity, precision and brilliance ... put the study of theology highest among all of my philosophical interests."[21] An enthusiastic Thomist, he was a frequent contributor to Catholic philosophical and educational journals, as well as a frequent speaker at Catholic institutions, so much so that some assumed he was a convert to Catholicism. But that was reserved for later.[20]

In 1940, James T. Farrell called Adler "the leading American fellow-traveller of the Roman Catholic Church." What was true for Adler, Farrell said, was what was "postulated in the dogma of the Roman Catholic Church," and he "sang the same tune" as avowed Catholic philosophers like Étienne Gilson, Jacques Maritain, and Martin D'Arcy. He also greatly admired Henri Bergson, the French Jewish philosopher and Nobel laureate, whose books the Catholic church had indexed as prohibited. Bergson refused to convert during the collaborationist Vichy regime, and despite the Statute on Jews he instead restated his previous views and was thus stripped of all his previous posts and honors.[20] Farrell attributed Adler's delay in joining the Church to his being among those Christians who "wanted their cake and ... wanted to eat it too" and compared him to the Emperor Constantine, who waited until he was on his deathbed to formally become a Catholic.[22]

Adler took a long time to make up his mind about theological issues. When he wrote How to Think About God: A Guide for the Twentieth-Century Pagan in 1980, he claimed to consider himself the pagan of the book's subtitle. In volume 51 of the Mars Hill Audio Journal (2001), Ken Myers includes his 1980 interview with Adler, conducted after How to Think About God was published. Myers reminisces, "During that interview, I asked him why he had never embraced the Christian faith himself. He explained that while he had been profoundly influenced by a number of Christian thinkers during his life, ... there were moral – not intellectual – obstacles to his conversion. He didn't explain any further."[23]

Myers notes that Adler finally "surrendered to the Hound of Heaven" and "made a confession of faith and was baptized" as an Episcopalian in 1984, only a few years after that interview. Offering insight into Adler's conversion, Myers quotes him from a subsequent 1990 article in Christianity magazine: "My chief reason for choosing Christianity was because the mysteries were incomprehensible. What's the point of revelation if we could figure it out ourselves? If it were wholly comprehensible, then it would just be another philosophy."[23]

According to his friend Deal Hudson, Adler "had been attracted to Catholicism for many years" and "wanted to be a Roman Catholic, but issues like abortion and the resistance of his family and friends" kept him away. Many thought he was baptized as an Episcopalian rather than a Catholic solely because of his "wonderful – and ardently Episcopal – wife" Caroline. Hudson suggests it is no coincidence that it was only after her death in 1998 that he took the final step.[24] In December 1999, in San Mateo, where he had moved to spend his last years, Adler was formally received into the Catholic Church by a long-time friend and admirer, Bishop Pierre DuMaine.[20] "Finally," wrote another friend, Ralph McInerny, "he became the Roman Catholic he had been training to be all his life".[6]

Despite not being a Catholic for most of his life, on account of his lifelong participation in the Neo-Thomist movement[23] and his almost equally long membership in the American Catholic Philosophical Association, this latter, according to McInerny[6] is willing to consider Adler "a Catholic philosopher".

Philosophy Edit

Adler referred to Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics as the "ethics of common sense" and also as "the only moral philosophy that is sound, practical, and undogmatic."[25] Thus, it is the only ethical doctrine that answers all the questions that moral philosophy should and can attempt to answer, neither more nor less, and that has answers that are true by the standard of truth that is appropriate and applicable to normative judgments. In contrast, Adler believed that other theories or doctrines try to answer more questions than they can or fewer than they should, and their answers are mixtures of truth and error, particularly the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant.

Adler was a self-proclaimed "moderate dualist" and viewed the positions of psychophysical dualism and materialistic monism to be opposite sides of two extremes. Regarding dualism, he dismissed the extreme form of dualism that stemmed from such philosophers as Plato (body and soul) and Descartes (mind and matter), as well as the theory of extreme monism and the mind–brain identity theory. After eliminating the extremes, Adler subscribed to a more moderate form of dualism. He believed that the brain is only a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for conceptual thought; that an "immaterial intellect" is also requisite as a condition;[26] and that the difference between human and animal behavior is a radical difference in kind. Adler defended this position against many challenges to dualistic theories.

Freedom and free will Edit

The meanings of "freedom" and "free will" have been and are under debate, and the debate is confused because there is no generally accepted definition of either term.[27][28][29] Adler's "Institute for Philosophical Research" spent ten years studying the "idea of freedom" as the word was used by hundreds of authors who have discussed and disputed freedom.[30] The study was published in 1958 as Volume One of The Idea of Freedom, subtitled A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom with subsequent comments in Adler's Philosophical Dictionary. Adler's study concluded that a delineation of three kinds of freedom – circumstantial, natural, and acquired – is necessary for clarity on the subject.[31][32]

  1. "Circumstantial freedom" denotes "freedom from coercion or restraint."
  2. "Natural freedom" denotes "freedom of a free will" or "free choice." It is the freedom to determine one's own decisions or plans. This freedom exists in everyone inherently, regardless of circumstances or state of mind.
  3. "Acquired freedom" is the freedom "to will as we ought to will" and, thus, "to live as [one] ought to live." This freedom is not inherent: it must be acquired by a change whereby a person gains qualities as "good, wise, virtuous, etc."[31]

Religion Edit

As Adler's interest in religion and theology increased, he made references to the Bible and the need to test articles of faith for compatibility with the conclusions of the science of nature and of philosophers.[33] In his 1981 book How to Think About God, Adler attempts to demonstrate God as the exnihilator (the creator of something from nothing).[2] Adler stressed that even with this conclusion, God's existence cannot be proven or demonstrated, but only established as true beyond a reasonable doubt. However, in a recent re-review of the argument, John Cramer concluded that recent developments in cosmology appear to converge with and support Adler's argument, and that in light of such theories as the multiverse, the argument is no worse for wear and may, indeed, now be judged somewhat more probable than it was originally.[34]

Adler believed that, if theology and religion are living things, there is nothing intrinsically wrong about efforts to modernize them. They must be open to change and growth like everything else. Furthermore, there is no reason to be surprised when discussions such as those about the "death of God" – a concept drawn from Friedrich Nietzsche – stir popular excitement as they did in the recent past and could do so again today. According to Adler, of all the great ideas, the idea of God has always been and continues to be the one that evokes the greatest concern among the widest group of men and women. However, he was opposed to the idea of converting atheism into a new form of religion or theology.

Personal life Edit

Mortimer Adler was married twice and had four children.[35] He married Helen Boynton in 1927. Together they adopted two children, Mark and Michael, in 1938 and 1940, respectively. They divorced in 1960. In 1963, Adler married Caroline Pring, his junior by thirty-four years; they had two children, Douglas and Philip.[36][37][38][39]

Awards Edit

Published works Edit

  • Dialectic (1927)
  • The Nature of Judicial Proof: An Inquiry into the Logical, Legal, and Empirical Aspects of the Law of Evidence (1931, with Jerome Michael)
  • Diagrammatics (1932, with Maude Phelps Hutchins)
  • Crime, Law and Social Science (1933, with Jerome Michael)
  • Art and Prudence: A Study in Practical Philosophy (1937)
  • What Man Has Made of Man: A Study of the Consequences of Platonism and Positivism in Psychology (1937)[42]
  • St. Thomas and the Gentiles (1938)
  • The Philosophy and Science of Man: A Collection of Texts as a Foundation for Ethics and Politics (1940)
  • How to Read a Book: The Art of Getting a Liberal Education (1940), 1966 edition subtitled A Guide to Reading the Great Books, 1972 revised edition with Charles Van Doren, The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading: ISBN 0-671-21209-5
  • Problems for Thomists: The Problem of Species (1940)
  • A Dialectic of Morals: Towards the Foundations of Political Philosophy (1941)
  • "How to Mark a Book". The Saturday Review of Literature. July 6, 1940.[43]
  • How to Think About War and Peace (1944)
  • The Revolution in Education (1944, with Milton Mayer)
  • Adler, Mortimer J. (1947). Heywood, Robert B. (ed.). The Works of the Mind: The Philosopher. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. OCLC 752682744.
  • The Idea of Freedom: A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom, vol. 1, Doubleday, 1958.
  • The Capitalist Manifesto (1958, with Louis O. Kelso) ISBN 0-8371-8210-7
  • The New Capitalists: A Proposal to Free Economic Growth from the Slavery of Savings (1961, with Louis O. Kelso)
  • The Idea of Freedom: A Dialectical Examination of the Controversies about Freedom (1961)
  • Great Ideas from the Great Books (1961)
  • The Conditions of Philosophy: Its Checkered Past, Its Present Disorder, and Its Future Promise (1965)
  • The Difference of Man and the Difference It Makes (1967)
  • The Time of Our Lives: The Ethics of Common Sense (1970)
  • The Common Sense of Politics (1971)
  • The American Testament (1975, with William Gorman)
  • Some Questions About Language: A Theory of Human Discourse and Its Objects (1976)
  • Philosopher at Large: An Intellectual Autobiography (1977)
  • Reforming Education: The Schooling of a People and Their Education Beyond Schooling (1977, edited by Geraldine Van Doren)
  • Aristotle for Everybody: Difficult Thought Made Easy (1978) ISBN 0-684-83823-0
  • How to Think About God: A Guide for the 20th-Century Pagan (1980) ISBN 0-02-016022-4
  • Six Great Ideas: Truth–Goodness–Beauty–Liberty–Equality–Justice (1981) ISBN 0-02-072020-3
  • The Angels and Us (1982)
  • The Paideia Proposal: An Educational Manifesto (1982) ISBN 0-684-84188-6
  • How to Speak / How to Listen (1983) ISBN 0-02-500570-7
  • Paideia Problems and Possibilities: A Consideration of Questions Raised by The Paideia Proposal (1983)
  • A Vision of the Future: Twelve Ideas for a Better Life and a Better Society (1984) ISBN 0-02-500280-5
  • The Paideia Program: An Educational Syllabus (1984, with Members of the Paideia Group) ISBN 0-02-013040-6
  • Ten Philosophical Mistakes: Basic Errors In Modern Thought – How they came about, their consequences, and how to avoid them. (1985) ISBN 0-02-500330-5
  • A Guidebook to Learning: For a Lifelong Pursuit of Wisdom (1986)
  • We Hold These Truths: Understanding the Ideas and Ideals of the Constitution (1987). ISBN 0-02-500370-4
  • Reforming Education: The Opening of the American Mind (1988, edited by Geraldine Van Doren)
  • Intellect: Mind Over Matter (1990)
  • Truth in Religion: The Plurality of Religions and the Unity of Truth (1990) ISBN 0-02-064140-0
  • Haves Without Have-Nots: Essays for the 21st Century on Democracy and Socialism (1991) ISBN 0-02-500561-8
  • Desires, Right & Wrong: The Ethics of Enough (1991)
  • A Second Look in the Rearview Mirror: Further Autobiographical Reflections of a Philosopher At Large (1992)
  • The Great Ideas: A Lexicon of Western Thought (1992)
  • Natural Theology, Chance, and God (The Great Ideas Today, 1992)
  • Adler, Mortimer J. (1993). The Four Dimensions of Philosophy: Metaphysical, Moral, Objective, Categorical. Macmillan. ISBN 0-02-500574-X.
  • Art, the Arts, and the Great Ideas (1994)
  • Philosophical Dictionary: 125 Key Terms for the Philosopher's Lexicon, Touchstone, 1995.
  • How to Think About The Great Ideas (2000) ISBN 0-8126-9412-0
  • How to Prove There Is a God (2011) ISBN 978-0-8126-9689-9

Anthologies, collections and surveys edited by Adler Edit

  • Scholasticism and Politics (1940)
  • Great Books of the Western World (1952, 52 volumes), 2nd edition 1990, 60 volumes
  • A Syntopicon: An Index to The Great Ideas (1952, 2 volumes), 2nd edition 1990
  • The Great Ideas Today (1961–77, 17 volumes), with Robert Hutchins, 1978–99, 21 volumes
  • The Negro in American History (1969, 3 volumes), with Charles Van Doren
  • Gateway to the Great Books (1963, 10 volumes), with Robert Hutchins
  • The Annals of America (1968, 21 volumes)
  • Propædia: Outline of Knowledge and Guide to The New Encyclopædia Britannica 15th Edition (1974, 30 volumes)
  • Great Treasury of Western Thought (1977, with Charles Van Doren) ISBN 0412449900

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ , The great ideas (short biography), archived from the original on December 10, 2014, retrieved April 6, 2013.
  2. ^ a b , Word gems, archived from the original on April 10, 2011
  3. ^ Adler, Mortimer J. (1985). Ten philosophical mistakes. New York, N.Y.: Macmillan. ISBN 0025003305.
  4. ^ Diane Ravitch, Left Back: A Century of Battles Over School Reform, Simon and Schuster (2001), p. 298
  5. ^ "Mortimer J. Adler | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com.
  6. ^ a b c McInerny, Ralph, , Radical academy, archived from the original on November 27, 2010.
  7. ^ "Charles A. Wagner", The New York Times (obituary), December 10, 1986.
  8. ^ The Morningside. Vol. x. Columbia University Press. April–May 1922. p. 113. ISBN 0-300-08462-5.
  9. ^ "Mortimer J Adler", Remarkable Columbians, Columbia U.
  10. ^ a b "Mortimer Adler", Faculty, Selu
  11. ^ Adler, Mortimer J. (1977). Philosopher at Large: An Intellectual Autobiography. Macmillan. p. 58–59 (St. John's College), 87–88 (People's Institute), 92–93 (rift), 113–116 (1929 collaboration). Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  12. ^ A Statement from the Department of Philosophy, Chicago, quoted on Cook, Gary (1993), George Herbert Mead: The Making of a Social Pragmatist, U. of Illinois Press, p. 186.
  13. ^ Van Doren, Charles (November 2002), , Columbia Forum (online ed.), archived from the original on June 9, 2007.
  14. ^ Temes, Peter (July 3, 2001), , Sun-Times, Chicago, archived from the original on November 4, 2007.
  15. ^ (website), U Chicago Law School, archived from the original on October 26, 2004.
  16. ^ "A Brief History of the Aspen Institute". The Aspen Institute. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  17. ^ Kelso, Louis O; Adler, Mortimer J (1958), The Capitalist Manifesto (PDF), Kelso institute.
  18. ^ Rosenberg, Bernard. "Assaulting the American Mind." Dissent. Spring 1988.
  19. ^ Adler, Mortimer J (1986), A Guidebook to Learning: For the Lifelong Pursuit of Wisdom, New York: Macmillan, p. 88.
  20. ^ a b c d Redpath, Peter, A Tribute to Mortimer J. Adler, Salvation is from the Jews.
  21. ^ Adler, Mortimer J (1992), A Second Look in the Rearview Mirror: Further Autobiographical Reflections of a Philosopher at Large, New York: Macmillan, p. 264.
  22. ^ Farrell, James T (1945) [1940], "Mortimer T. Adler: A Provincial Torquemada", The League of Frightened Philistines and Other Papers (reprint), New York: Vanguard Press, pp. 106–109.
  23. ^ a b c Mortimer Adler (biography), Basic Famous People.
  24. ^ Hudson, Deal (June 29, 2009), , Inside catholic, archived from the original on April 10, 2011, retrieved October 18, 2010.
  25. ^ Adler, Mortimer Ten Philosophical Mistakes: Basic Errors in Modern Thought: How They Came About, Their Consequences, and How to Avoid Them.(1985) ISBN 0-02-500330-5, p. 196
  26. ^ , Book of Job, archived from the original on September 22, 2004.
  27. ^ Kane, Robert (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Free Will, p. 10.
  28. ^ Fischer, John Martin; Kane, Robert; Pereboom, Derk; Vargas, Manuel (2007), Four Views on Free Will, Blackwell, p. 128
  29. ^ Barnes, R Eric, , Mtholyoke, archived from the original on February 16, 2005, retrieved October 19, 2009.
  30. ^ Adler 1995, p. 137, Liberty.
  31. ^ a b Adler 1958, pp. 127, 135, 149.
  32. ^ Adler 1995, pp. 137–138, Liberty.
  33. ^ Adler, Mortimer J (1992) [Macmillan, 1990], 'Truth in Religion: The Plurality of Religions and the Unity of Truth (reprint), Touchstone, pp. 29–30.
  34. ^ John Cramer. "Adler's Cosmological Argument for the Existence of God". Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, March 1995, pp. 32–42.
  35. ^ Grimes, William (June 29, 2001), "Mortimer Adler, 98, Dies; Helped Create Study of Classics", The New York Times.
  36. ^ Tribune, Chicago. "Caroline Pring Adler". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  37. ^ "Mortimer Adler Dies". Washington Post. June 30, 2001. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  38. ^ Adler, Mortimer (1977). Philosopher at Large: An Intellectual Autobiography. New York: MacMillan Publishing Co. pp. 96. ISBN 0-02-500490-5.
  39. ^ Adler, Philosopher at Large: An Intellectual Autobiography (New York: Macmillan, 1977), p. 227.
  40. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  41. ^ "Aspen Hall of Fame Inductees". Aspen Hall of Fame.
  42. ^ What Man Has Made of Man, Archive, 1938, OCLC 807118494.
  43. ^ Mortimer J. Adler (July 6, 1940), "How to Mark a Book", The Saturday Review of Literature: 11–12

Further reading Edit

  • Ashmore, Harry (1989). Unseasonable Truths: The Life of Robert Maynard Hutchins. New York: Little Brown. ISBN 9780316053969.
  • Beam, Alex (2008). A Great Idea at the Time: The Rise, Fall, and Curious Afterlife of the Great Books. New York: Public Affairs.
  • Crockett, Jr.; Bennie R. (2000). Mortimer J. Adler: An Analysis and Critique of His Eclectic Epistemology (Ph.D. dissertation). University of Wales, Lampeter, UK.
  • Dzuback, Mary Ann (1991). Robert M. Hutchins: Portrait of an Educator. Chicago: University of Chicago. ISBN 9780226177106.
  • Kass, Amy A. (1973). Radical Conservatives for a Liberal Education. PhD dissertation.
  • Lacy, Tim Lacy (2006). Making a Democratic Culture: The Great Books Idea, Mortimer J. Adler, and Twentieth-Century America (Ph.D. dissertation). Chicago: Loyola University.
  • McNeill, William (1991). Hutchins' University: A Memoir of the University of Chicago 1929–50. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Moorhead, Hugh Moorhead (1964). The Great Books Movement(Ph.D. dissertation). University of Chicago. OCLC 6060691.
  • Rubin, Joan Shelley (1992). The Making of Middlebrow Culture (Ph.D. dissertation). Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

External links Edit

  • Center for the Study of The Great Ideas
  • Mortimer J. Adler at IMDb
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Adler papers at University of Texas at Austin
  • Adler papers at Syracuse University
  • Guide to the Mortimer J. Adler Papers 1914–1995 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

mortimer, adler, mortimer, jerome, adler, december, 1902, june, 2001, american, philosopher, educator, encyclopedist, popular, author, philosopher, worked, within, aristotelian, thomistic, traditions, taught, columbia, university, university, chicago, served, . Mortimer Jerome Adler December 28 1902 June 28 2001 was an American philosopher educator encyclopedist and popular author As a philosopher he worked within the Aristotelian and Thomistic traditions He taught at Columbia University and the University of Chicago served as chairman of the Encyclopaedia Britannica board of editors and founded the Institute for Philosophical Research Mortimer J AdlerAdler while presiding over the Center for the Study of The Great IdeasBornMortimer Jerome Adler 1902 12 28 December 28 1902New York City U S DiedJune 28 2001 2001 06 28 aged 98 San Mateo California U S EducationColumbia University PhD Notable workAristotle for Everybody How to Read a Book A SyntopiconSpousesHelen Leavenworth Boynton m 1927 div 1960 wbr Caroline Sage Pring m 1963 died 1998 wbr Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAristotelianismThomismMain interestsPhilosophical theology metaphysics ethicsHe lived for long stretches in New York City Chicago San Francisco and San Mateo California 1 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Intellectual development and philosophic evolution 1 2 New York City 1 3 Chicago 1 4 Popular appeal 2 Encyclopedia and Educational Reform 3 Religion and theology 4 Philosophy 4 1 Freedom and free will 4 2 Religion 5 Personal life 6 Awards 7 Published works 7 1 Anthologies collections and surveys edited by Adler 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography EditIntellectual development and philosophic evolution Edit While doing newspaper work and taking night classes during his adolescence Adler encountered works of men he would come to call heroes Plato Aristotle Thomas Aquinas John Locke John Stuart Mill and others who were assailed as irrelevant by student activists in the 1960s and subjected to politically correct attack in later decades 2 His thought evolved toward the correction of what he considered philosophical mistakes as reflected in his 1985 book Ten Philosophical Mistakes Basic Errors in Modern Thought 3 In Adler s view these errors were introduced by Descartes on the continent and by Thomas Hobbes and David Hume in Britain and were caused by a culpable ignorance about Aristotle by those who rejected the conclusions of dogmatic philosophy without acknowledging its sound classical premises These modern errors were compounded and perpetuated by Kant and the idealists and existentialists on the one side and by John Stuart Mill Jeremy Bentham and Bertrand Russell and the English analytic tradition on the other according to Adler He corrected these mistakes at least to his own satisfaction with reference to insights and distinctions drawn from the Aristotelian tradition New York City Edit Adler was born in Manhattan New York City on December 28 1902 to Jewish immigrants from Germany Clarissa Manheim a schoolteacher and Ignatz Adler a jewelry salesman 4 5 He dropped out of school at age 14 to become a copy boy for the New York Sun with the ultimate aspiration of becoming a journalist 6 Adler soon returned to school to take writing classes at night where he discovered the western philosophical tradition After his early schooling and work he went on to study at Columbia University and contributed to the student literary magazine The Morningside a poem Choice in 1922 when Charles A Wagner 7 was editor in chief and Whittaker Chambers an associate editor 8 Though he refused to take the required swimming test for a bachelor s degree a matter that was rectified when Columbia gave him an honorary degree in 1983 he stayed at the university and eventually received an instructorship and finally a doctorate in psychology 9 While at Columbia University Adler wrote his first book Dialectic published in 1927 10 Adler worked with Scott Buchanan at the People s Institute and then for many years on their respective Great Books efforts Buchanan was the founder of the Great Books program at St John s College 11 Chicago Edit In 1930 Robert Hutchins the newly appointed president of the University of Chicago whom Adler had befriended some years earlier arranged for Chicago s law school to hire him as a professor of the philosophy of law The philosophers at Chicago who included James H Tufts E A Burtt and George H Mead had entertained grave doubts as to Dr Adler s competence in the field of philosophy 12 and resisted Adler s appointment to the university s Department of Philosophy 13 14 Adler was the first non lawyer to join the law school faculty 15 After the Great Books seminar inspired Chicago businessman and university trustee Walter Paepcke to found the Aspen Institute Adler taught philosophy to business executives there 10 16 Popular appeal Edit Adler long strove to bring philosophy to the masses and some of his works such as How to Read a Book became popular bestsellers He was also an advocate of economic democracy and wrote an influential preface to Louis O Kelso s The Capitalist Manifesto 17 Adler was often aided in his thinking and writing by Arthur Rubin an old friend from his Columbia undergraduate days In his own words Unlike many of my contemporaries I never write books for my fellow professors to read I have no interest in the academic audience at all I m interested in Joe Doakes A general audience can read any book I write and they do Dwight Macdonald once criticized Adler s popular style by saying Mr Adler once wrote a book called How to Read a Book He should now read a book called How to Write a Book 18 Encyclopedia and Educational Reform EditAdler and Hutchins went on to found the Great Books of the Western World program and the Great Books Foundation In 1952 Adler founded and served as director of the Institute for Philosophical Research He also served on the Board of Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica compiled its Syntopicon and later Propaedia and succeeded Hutchins as its chairman from 1974 As the director of editorial planning for the fifteenth edition of Britannica from 1965 he was instrumental in the major reorganization of knowledge embodied in that edition 19 He introduced the Paideia Proposal which resulted in his founding the Paideia Program a grade school curriculum centered around guided reading and discussion of difficult works as judged for each grade With Max Weismann he founded the Center for the Study of the Great Ideas in 1990 in Chicago Religion and theology EditAdler was born into a nonobservant Jewish family In his early twenties he discovered St Thomas Aquinas and in particular the Summa Theologica 20 Many years later he wrote that its intellectual austerity integrity precision and brilliance put the study of theology highest among all of my philosophical interests 21 An enthusiastic Thomist he was a frequent contributor to Catholic philosophical and educational journals as well as a frequent speaker at Catholic institutions so much so that some assumed he was a convert to Catholicism But that was reserved for later 20 In 1940 James T Farrell called Adler the leading American fellow traveller of the Roman Catholic Church What was true for Adler Farrell said was what was postulated in the dogma of the Roman Catholic Church and he sang the same tune as avowed Catholic philosophers like Etienne Gilson Jacques Maritain and Martin D Arcy He also greatly admired Henri Bergson the French Jewish philosopher and Nobel laureate whose books the Catholic church had indexed as prohibited Bergson refused to convert during the collaborationist Vichy regime and despite the Statute on Jews he instead restated his previous views and was thus stripped of all his previous posts and honors 20 Farrell attributed Adler s delay in joining the Church to his being among those Christians who wanted their cake and wanted to eat it too and compared him to the Emperor Constantine who waited until he was on his deathbed to formally become a Catholic 22 Adler took a long time to make up his mind about theological issues When he wrote How to Think About God A Guide for the Twentieth Century Pagan in 1980 he claimed to consider himself the pagan of the book s subtitle In volume 51 of the Mars Hill Audio Journal 2001 Ken Myers includes his 1980 interview with Adler conducted after How to Think About God was published Myers reminisces During that interview I asked him why he had never embraced the Christian faith himself He explained that while he had been profoundly influenced by a number of Christian thinkers during his life there were moral not intellectual obstacles to his conversion He didn t explain any further 23 Myers notes that Adler finally surrendered to the Hound of Heaven and made a confession of faith and was baptized as an Episcopalian in 1984 only a few years after that interview Offering insight into Adler s conversion Myers quotes him from a subsequent 1990 article in Christianity magazine My chief reason for choosing Christianity was because the mysteries were incomprehensible What s the point of revelation if we could figure it out ourselves If it were wholly comprehensible then it would just be another philosophy 23 According to his friend Deal Hudson Adler had been attracted to Catholicism for many years and wanted to be a Roman Catholic but issues like abortion and the resistance of his family and friends kept him away Many thought he was baptized as an Episcopalian rather than a Catholic solely because of his wonderful and ardently Episcopal wife Caroline Hudson suggests it is no coincidence that it was only after her death in 1998 that he took the final step 24 In December 1999 in San Mateo where he had moved to spend his last years Adler was formally received into the Catholic Church by a long time friend and admirer Bishop Pierre DuMaine 20 Finally wrote another friend Ralph McInerny he became the Roman Catholic he had been training to be all his life 6 Despite not being a Catholic for most of his life on account of his lifelong participation in the Neo Thomist movement 23 and his almost equally long membership in the American Catholic Philosophical Association this latter according to McInerny 6 is willing to consider Adler a Catholic philosopher Philosophy EditAdler referred to Aristotle s Nicomachean Ethics as the ethics of common sense and also as the only moral philosophy that is sound practical and undogmatic 25 Thus it is the only ethical doctrine that answers all the questions that moral philosophy should and can attempt to answer neither more nor less and that has answers that are true by the standard of truth that is appropriate and applicable to normative judgments In contrast Adler believed that other theories or doctrines try to answer more questions than they can or fewer than they should and their answers are mixtures of truth and error particularly the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant Adler was a self proclaimed moderate dualist and viewed the positions of psychophysical dualism and materialistic monism to be opposite sides of two extremes Regarding dualism he dismissed the extreme form of dualism that stemmed from such philosophers as Plato body and soul and Descartes mind and matter as well as the theory of extreme monism and the mind brain identity theory After eliminating the extremes Adler subscribed to a more moderate form of dualism He believed that the brain is only a necessary but not a sufficient condition for conceptual thought that an immaterial intellect is also requisite as a condition 26 and that the difference between human and animal behavior is a radical difference in kind Adler defended this position against many challenges to dualistic theories Freedom and free will Edit The meanings of freedom and free will have been and are under debate and the debate is confused because there is no generally accepted definition of either term 27 28 29 Adler s Institute for Philosophical Research spent ten years studying the idea of freedom as the word was used by hundreds of authors who have discussed and disputed freedom 30 The study was published in 1958 as Volume One of The Idea of Freedom subtitled A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom with subsequent comments in Adler s Philosophical Dictionary Adler s study concluded that a delineation of three kinds of freedom circumstantial natural and acquired is necessary for clarity on the subject 31 32 Circumstantial freedom denotes freedom from coercion or restraint Natural freedom denotes freedom of a free will or free choice It is the freedom to determine one s own decisions or plans This freedom exists in everyone inherently regardless of circumstances or state of mind Acquired freedom is the freedom to will as we ought to will and thus to live as one ought to live This freedom is not inherent it must be acquired by a change whereby a person gains qualities as good wise virtuous etc 31 Religion Edit As Adler s interest in religion and theology increased he made references to the Bible and the need to test articles of faith for compatibility with the conclusions of the science of nature and of philosophers 33 In his 1981 book How to Think About God Adler attempts to demonstrate God as the exnihilator the creator of something from nothing 2 Adler stressed that even with this conclusion God s existence cannot be proven or demonstrated but only established as true beyond a reasonable doubt However in a recent re review of the argument John Cramer concluded that recent developments in cosmology appear to converge with and support Adler s argument and that in light of such theories as the multiverse the argument is no worse for wear and may indeed now be judged somewhat more probable than it was originally 34 Adler believed that if theology and religion are living things there is nothing intrinsically wrong about efforts to modernize them They must be open to change and growth like everything else Furthermore there is no reason to be surprised when discussions such as those about the death of God a concept drawn from Friedrich Nietzsche stir popular excitement as they did in the recent past and could do so again today According to Adler of all the great ideas the idea of God has always been and continues to be the one that evokes the greatest concern among the widest group of men and women However he was opposed to the idea of converting atheism into a new form of religion or theology Personal life EditMortimer Adler was married twice and had four children 35 He married Helen Boynton in 1927 Together they adopted two children Mark and Michael in 1938 and 1940 respectively They divorced in 1960 In 1963 Adler married Caroline Pring his junior by thirty four years they had two children Douglas and Philip 36 37 38 39 Awards Edit1985 Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement 40 1993 Aspen Hall of Fame 41 Published works EditDialectic 1927 The Nature of Judicial Proof An Inquiry into the Logical Legal and Empirical Aspects of the Law of Evidence 1931 with Jerome Michael Diagrammatics 1932 with Maude Phelps Hutchins Crime Law and Social Science 1933 with Jerome Michael Art and Prudence A Study in Practical Philosophy 1937 What Man Has Made of Man A Study of the Consequences of Platonism and Positivism in Psychology 1937 42 St Thomas and the Gentiles 1938 The Philosophy and Science of Man A Collection of Texts as a Foundation for Ethics and Politics 1940 How to Read a Book The Art of Getting a Liberal Education 1940 1966 edition subtitled A Guide to Reading the Great Books 1972 revised edition with Charles Van Doren The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading ISBN 0 671 21209 5 Problems for Thomists The Problem of Species 1940 A Dialectic of Morals Towards the Foundations of Political Philosophy 1941 How to Mark a Book The Saturday Review of Literature July 6 1940 43 How to Think About War and Peace 1944 The Revolution in Education 1944 with Milton Mayer Adler Mortimer J 1947 Heywood Robert B ed The Works of the Mind The Philosopher Chicago University of Chicago Press OCLC 752682744 The Idea of Freedom A Dialectical Examination of the Idea of Freedom vol 1 Doubleday 1958 The Capitalist Manifesto 1958 with Louis O Kelso ISBN 0 8371 8210 7 The New Capitalists A Proposal to Free Economic Growth from the Slavery of Savings 1961 with Louis O Kelso The Idea of Freedom A Dialectical Examination of the Controversies about Freedom 1961 Great Ideas from the Great Books 1961 The Conditions of Philosophy Its Checkered Past Its Present Disorder and Its Future Promise 1965 The Difference of Man and the Difference It Makes 1967 The Time of Our Lives The Ethics of Common Sense 1970 The Common Sense of Politics 1971 The American Testament 1975 with William Gorman Some Questions About Language A Theory of Human Discourse and Its Objects 1976 Philosopher at Large An Intellectual Autobiography 1977 Reforming Education The Schooling of a People and Their Education Beyond Schooling 1977 edited by Geraldine Van Doren Aristotle for Everybody Difficult Thought Made Easy 1978 ISBN 0 684 83823 0 How to Think About God A Guide for the 20th Century Pagan 1980 ISBN 0 02 016022 4 Six Great Ideas Truth Goodness Beauty Liberty Equality Justice 1981 ISBN 0 02 072020 3 The Angels and Us 1982 The Paideia Proposal An Educational Manifesto 1982 ISBN 0 684 84188 6 How to Speak How to Listen 1983 ISBN 0 02 500570 7 Paideia Problems and Possibilities A Consideration of Questions Raised by The Paideia Proposal 1983 A Vision of the Future Twelve Ideas for a Better Life and a Better Society 1984 ISBN 0 02 500280 5 The Paideia Program An Educational Syllabus 1984 with Members of the Paideia Group ISBN 0 02 013040 6 Ten Philosophical Mistakes Basic Errors In Modern Thought How they came about their consequences and how to avoid them 1985 ISBN 0 02 500330 5 A Guidebook to Learning For a Lifelong Pursuit of Wisdom 1986 We Hold These Truths Understanding the Ideas and Ideals of the Constitution 1987 ISBN 0 02 500370 4 Reforming Education The Opening of the American Mind 1988 edited by Geraldine Van Doren Intellect Mind Over Matter 1990 Truth in Religion The Plurality of Religions and the Unity of Truth 1990 ISBN 0 02 064140 0 Haves Without Have Nots Essays for the 21st Century on Democracy and Socialism 1991 ISBN 0 02 500561 8 Desires Right amp Wrong The Ethics of Enough 1991 A Second Look in the Rearview Mirror Further Autobiographical Reflections of a Philosopher At Large 1992 The Great Ideas A Lexicon of Western Thought 1992 Natural Theology Chance and God The Great Ideas Today 1992 Adler Mortimer J 1993 The Four Dimensions of Philosophy Metaphysical Moral Objective Categorical Macmillan ISBN 0 02 500574 X Art the Arts and the Great Ideas 1994 Philosophical Dictionary 125 Key Terms for the Philosopher s Lexicon Touchstone 1995 How to Think About The Great Ideas 2000 ISBN 0 8126 9412 0 How to Prove There Is a God 2011 ISBN 978 0 8126 9689 9Anthologies collections and surveys edited by Adler Edit Scholasticism and Politics 1940 Great Books of the Western World 1952 52 volumes 2nd edition 1990 60 volumes A Syntopicon An Index to The Great Ideas 1952 2 volumes 2nd edition 1990 The Great Ideas Today 1961 77 17 volumes with Robert Hutchins 1978 99 21 volumes The Negro in American History 1969 3 volumes with Charles Van Doren Gateway to the Great Books 1963 10 volumes with Robert Hutchins The Annals of America 1968 21 volumes Propaedia Outline of Knowledge and Guide to The New Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th Edition 1974 30 volumes Great Treasury of Western Thought 1977 with Charles Van Doren ISBN 0412449900See also EditList of American philosophers Educational perennialismReferences Edit Adler The great ideas short biography archived from the original on December 10 2014 retrieved April 6 2013 a b Mortimer Adler 1902 2001 The Day Philosophy Died Word gems archived from the original on April 10 2011 Adler Mortimer J 1985 Ten philosophical mistakes New York N Y Macmillan ISBN 0025003305 Diane Ravitch Left Back A Century of Battles Over School Reform Simon and Schuster 2001 p 298 Mortimer J Adler Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com a b c McInerny Ralph Memento Mortimer Radical academy archived from the original on November 27 2010 Charles A Wagner The New York Times obituary December 10 1986 The Morningside Vol x Columbia University Press April May 1922 p 113 ISBN 0 300 08462 5 Mortimer J Adler Remarkable Columbians Columbia U a b Mortimer Adler Faculty Selu Adler Mortimer J 1977 Philosopher at Large An Intellectual Autobiography Macmillan p 58 59 St John s College 87 88 People s Institute 92 93 rift 113 116 1929 collaboration Retrieved January 12 2018 A Statement from the Department of Philosophy Chicago quoted on Cook Gary 1993 George Herbert Mead The Making of a Social Pragmatist U of Illinois Press p 186 Van Doren Charles November 2002 Mortimer J Adler 1902 2001 Columbia Forum online ed archived from the original on June 9 2007 Temes Peter July 3 2001 Death of a Great Reader and Philosopher Sun Times Chicago archived from the original on November 4 2007 Centennial Facts of the Day website U Chicago Law School archived from the original on October 26 2004 A Brief History of the Aspen Institute The Aspen Institute Retrieved May 3 2022 Kelso Louis O Adler Mortimer J 1958 The Capitalist Manifesto PDF Kelso institute Rosenberg Bernard Assaulting the American Mind Dissent Spring 1988 Adler Mortimer J 1986 A Guidebook to Learning For the Lifelong Pursuit of Wisdom New York Macmillan p 88 a b c d Redpath Peter A Tribute to Mortimer J Adler Salvation is from the Jews Adler Mortimer J 1992 A Second Look in the Rearview Mirror Further Autobiographical Reflections of a Philosopher at Large New York Macmillan p 264 Farrell James T 1945 1940 Mortimer T Adler A Provincial Torquemada The League of Frightened Philistines and Other Papers reprint New York Vanguard Press pp 106 109 a b c Mortimer Adler biography Basic Famous People Hudson Deal June 29 2009 The Great Philosopher Who Became Catholic Inside catholic archived from the original on April 10 2011 retrieved October 18 2010 Adler Mortimer Ten Philosophical Mistakes Basic Errors in Modern Thought How They Came About Their Consequences and How to Avoid Them 1985 ISBN 0 02 500330 5 p 196 Mortimer J Adler on the Immaterial Intellect Book of Job archived from the original on September 22 2004 Kane Robert ed The Oxford Handbook of Free Will p 10 Fischer John Martin Kane Robert Pereboom Derk Vargas Manuel 2007 Four Views on Free Will Blackwell p 128 Barnes R Eric Freedom Mtholyoke archived from the original on February 16 2005 retrieved October 19 2009 Adler 1995 p 137 Liberty sfn error no target CITEREFAdler1995 help a b Adler 1958 pp 127 135 149 sfn error no target CITEREFAdler1958 help Adler 1995 pp 137 138 Liberty sfn error no target CITEREFAdler1995 help Adler Mortimer J 1992 Macmillan 1990 Truth in Religion The Plurality of Religions and the Unity of Truth reprint Touchstone pp 29 30 John Cramer Adler s Cosmological Argument for the Existence of God Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith March 1995 pp 32 42 Grimes William June 29 2001 Mortimer Adler 98 Dies Helped Create Study of Classics The New York Times Tribune Chicago Caroline Pring Adler chicagotribune com Retrieved January 22 2020 Mortimer Adler Dies Washington Post June 30 2001 Retrieved January 22 2020 Adler Mortimer 1977 Philosopher at Large An Intellectual Autobiography New York MacMillan Publishing Co pp 96 ISBN 0 02 500490 5 Adler Philosopher at Large An Intellectual Autobiography New York Macmillan 1977 p 227 Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement www achievement org American Academy of Achievement Aspen Hall of Fame Inductees Aspen Hall of Fame What Man Has Made of Man Archive 1938 OCLC 807118494 Mortimer J Adler July 6 1940 How to Mark a Book The Saturday Review of Literature 11 12Further reading EditAshmore Harry 1989 Unseasonable Truths The Life of Robert Maynard Hutchins New York Little Brown ISBN 9780316053969 Beam Alex 2008 A Great Idea at the Time The Rise Fall and Curious Afterlife of the Great Books New York Public Affairs Crockett Jr Bennie R 2000 Mortimer J Adler An Analysis and Critique of His Eclectic Epistemology Ph D dissertation University of Wales Lampeter UK Dzuback Mary Ann 1991 Robert M Hutchins Portrait of an Educator Chicago University of Chicago ISBN 9780226177106 Kass Amy A 1973 Radical Conservatives for a Liberal Education PhD dissertation Lacy Tim Lacy 2006 Making a Democratic Culture The Great Books Idea Mortimer J Adler and Twentieth Century America Ph D dissertation Chicago Loyola University McNeill William 1991 Hutchins University A Memoir of the University of Chicago 1929 50 Chicago University of Chicago Press Moorhead Hugh Moorhead 1964 The Great Books Movement Ph D dissertation University of Chicago OCLC 6060691 Rubin Joan Shelley 1992 The Making of Middlebrow Culture Ph D dissertation Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press External links EditMortimer J Adler at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Center for the Study of The Great Ideas Mortimer J Adler at IMDb Appearances on C SPAN Adler papers at University of Texas at Austin Adler papers at Syracuse University Guide to the Mortimer J Adler Papers 1914 1995 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mortimer J Adler amp oldid 1174495290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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