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Thomas Nagel

Thomas Nagel (/ˈnɡəl/; born July 4, 1937) is an American philosopher. He is the University Professor of Philosophy and Law Emeritus at New York University,[3] where he taught from 1980 to 2016.[4] His main areas of philosophical interest are legal philosophy, political philosophy, and ethics.[5]

Thomas Nagel
Nagel in 1978
Born (1937-07-04) July 4, 1937 (age 86)
NationalityAmerican
Spouses
  • Doris G. Blum
    (m. 1958; div. 1973)
  • (m. 1979; died 2014)
Awards
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisAltruism (1963)
Doctoral advisorJohn Rawls
Other advisorsJ. L. Austin
Academic work
DisciplinePhilosophy
Sub-discipline
School or traditionAnalytic philosophy
Institutions
Doctoral students
Notable works
Notable ideas

Nagel is known for his critique of material reductionist accounts of the mind, particularly in his essay "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?" (1974), and for his contributions to liberal moral and political theory in The Possibility of Altruism (1970) and subsequent writings. He continued the critique of reductionism in Mind and Cosmos (2012), in which he argues against the neo-Darwinian view of the emergence of consciousness.

Life and career edit

 
Nagel in 2008, teaching ethics

Nagel was born on July 4, 1937, in Belgrade, Yugoslavia (now Serbia), to German Jewish refugees Carolyn (Baer) and Walter Nagel.[6][7] He arrived in the US in 1939, and was raised in and around New York.[7] He had no religious upbringing, but regards himself as a Jew.[8]

Nagel received a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy from Cornell University in 1958, where he was a member of the Telluride House and was introduced to the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein. He then attended the University of Oxford on a Fulbright Scholarship and received a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1960; there, he studied with J. L. Austin and Paul Grice. He received his Doctor of Philosophy degree in philosophy from Harvard University in 1963.[4][9] At Harvard, Nagel studied under John Rawls, whom Nagel later called "the most important political philosopher of the twentieth century."[10]

Nagel taught at the University of California, Berkeley (from 1963 to 1966) and at Princeton University (from 1966 to 1980), where he trained many well-known philosophers, including Susan Wolf, Shelly Kagan, and Samuel Scheffler, the last of whom is now his colleague at New York University.

Nagel is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a corresponding fellow of the British Academy, and in 2006 was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society.[11] He has held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.[11] In 2008 he was awarded a Rolf Schock Prize for his work in philosophy,[12] the Balzan prize,[13] and the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from the University of Oxford.[14]

Philosophical work edit

Overview edit

Nagel began to publish philosophy at age 22; his career now spans over 60 years of publication. He thinks that each person, owing to their capacity to reason, instinctively seeks a unified world view, but if this aspiration leads one to believe that there is only one way to understand our intellectual commitments, whether about the external world, knowledge, or what our practical and moral reasons ought to be, one errs. For contingent, limited and finite creatures, no such unified world view is possible, because ways of understanding are not always better when they are more objective.

Like the British philosopher Bernard Williams, Nagel believes that the rise of modern science has permanently changed how people think of the world and our place in it. A modern scientific understanding is one way of thinking about the world and our place in it that is more objective than the commonsense view it replaces. It is more objective because it is less dependent on our peculiarities as the kinds of thinkers that people are. Our modern scientific understanding involves the mathematicized understanding of the world represented by modern physics. Understanding this bleached-out view of the world draws on our capacities as purely rational thinkers and fails to account for the specific nature of our perceptual sensibility. Nagel repeatedly returns to the distinction between "primary" and "secondary" qualities—that is, between primary qualities of objects like mass and shape, which are mathematically and structurally describable independent of our sensory apparatuses, and secondary qualities like taste and color, which depend on our sensory apparatuses.

Despite what may seem like skepticism about the objective claims of science, Nagel does not dispute that science describes the world that exists independently of us. His contention, rather, is that a given way of understanding a subject matter should not be regarded as better simply for being more objective. He argues that scientific understanding's attempt at an objective viewpoint—a "view from nowhere"—necessarily leaves out something essential when applied to the mind, which inherently has a subjective point of view. As such, objective science is fundamentally unable to help people fully understand themselves. In "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?" and elsewhere, he writes that science cannot describe what it is like to be a thinker who conceives of the world from a particular subjective perspective.

Nagel argues that some phenomena are not best grasped from a more objective perspective. The standpoint of the thinker does not present itself to the thinker: they are that standpoint. One learns and uses mental concepts by being directly acquainted with one's own mind, whereas any attempt to think more objectively about mentality would abstract away from this fact. It would, of its nature, leave out what it is to be a thinker, and that, Nagel believes, would be a falsely objectifying view. Being a thinker is to have a subjective perspective on the world; if one abstracts away from this perspective one leaves out what he sought to explain.

Nagel thinks that philosophers, over-impressed by the paradigm of the kind of objective understanding represented by modern science, tend to produce theories of the mind that are falsely objectifying in precisely this kind of way. They are right to be impressed—modern science really is objective—but wrong to take modern science to be the only paradigm of objectivity. The kind of understanding that science represents does not apply to everything people would like to understand.

As a philosophical rationalist, Nagel believes that a proper understanding of the place of mental properties in nature will involve a revolution in our understanding of both the physical and the mental, and that this is a reasonable prospect that people can anticipate in the near future. A plausible science of the mind will give an account of the stuff that underpins mental and physical properties in such a way that people will simply be able to see that it necessitates both of these aspects. Now, it seems to people that the mental and the physical are irreducibly distinct, but that is not a metaphysical insight, or an acknowledgment of an irreducible explanatory gap, but simply where people are at their present stage of understanding.

Nagel's rationalism and tendency to present human nature as composite, structured around our capacity to reason, explains why he thinks that therapeutic or deflationary accounts of philosophy are complacent and that radical skepticism is, strictly speaking, irrefutable.[clarification needed] The therapeutic or deflationary philosopher, influenced by Wittgenstein's later philosophy, reconciles people to the dependence of our worldview on our "form of life". Nagel accuses Wittgenstein and American philosopher of mind and language Donald Davidson of philosophical idealism.[15] Both ask people to take up an interpretative perspective to making sense of other speakers in the context of a shared, objective world. This, for Nagel, elevates contingent conditions of our makeup into criteria for what is real. The result "cuts the world down to size" and makes what there is dependent on what there can be interpreted to be. Nagel claims this is no better than more orthodox forms of idealism in which reality is claimed to be made up of mental items or constitutively dependent on a form supplied by the mind.

Philosophy of mind edit

What is it like to be a something edit

Nagel is probably most widely known in philosophy of mind as an advocate of the idea that consciousness and subjective experience cannot, at least with the contemporary understanding of physicalism, be satisfactorily explained with the concepts of physics. This position was primarily discussed by Nagel in one of his most famous articles: "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?" (1974). The article's title question, though often attributed to Nagel, was originally asked by Timothy Sprigge. The article was originally published in 1974 in The Philosophical Review, and has been reprinted several times, including in The Mind's I (edited by Daniel Dennett and Douglas Hofstadter), Readings in the Philosophy of Psychology (edited by Ned Block), Nagel's Mortal Questions (1979), The Nature of Mind (edited by David M. Rosenthal), and Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings (edited by David J. Chalmers).

In "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?", Nagel argues that consciousness has essential to it a subjective character, a what it is like aspect. He writes, "an organism has conscious mental states if and only if there is something that it is like to be that organism—something it is like for the organism."[16] His critics[who?] have objected to what they see as a misguided attempt to argue from a fact about how one represents the world (trivially, one can only do so from one's point of view) to a false claim about the world, that it somehow has first-personal perspectives built into it. On that understanding, Nagel is a conventional dualist about the physical and the mental. This is, however, a misunderstanding[according to whom?]: Nagel's point is that there is a constraint on what it is to possess the concept of a mental state, namely, that one be directly acquainted with it. Concepts of mental states are only made available to a thinker who can be acquainted with their own states; clearly, the possession and use of physical concepts has no corresponding constraint.

Part of the puzzlement here is because of the limitations of imagination: influenced by his Princeton colleague Saul Kripke, Nagel believes that any type identity statement that identifies a physical state type with a mental state type would be, if true, necessarily true. But Kripke argues that one can easily imagine a situation where, for example, one's C-fibres are stimulated but one is not in pain and so refute any such psychophysical identity from the armchair. (A parallel argument does not hold for genuine theoretical identities.) This argument that there will always be an explanatory gap between an identification of a state in mental and physical terms is compounded, Nagel argues, by the fact that imagination operates in two distinct ways. When asked to imagine sensorily, one imagines C-fibres being stimulated; if asked to imagine sympathetically, one puts oneself in a conscious state resembling pain. These two ways of imagining the two terms of the identity statement are so different that there will always seem to be an explanatory gap, whether or not this is the case. (Some philosophers of mind[who?] have taken these arguments as helpful for physicalism on the grounds that it exposes a limitation that makes the existence of an explanatory gap seem compelling, while others[who?] have argued that this makes the case for physicalism even more impossible as it cannot be defended even in principle.)

Nagel is not a physicalist because he does not believe that an internal understanding of mental concepts shows them to have the kind of hidden essence that underpins a scientific identity in, say, chemistry. But his skepticism is about current physics: he envisages in his most recent work that people may be close to a scientific breakthrough in identifying an underlying essence that is neither physical (as people currently think of the physical), nor functional, nor mental, but such that it necessitates all three of these ways in which the mind "appears" to us. The difference between the kind of explanation he rejects and the kind he accepts depends on his understanding of transparency: from his earliest work to his most recent Nagel has always insisted that a prior context is required to make identity statements plausible, intelligible and transparent.

Natural selection and consciousness edit

In his 2012 book Mind and Cosmos, Nagel argues against a materialist view of the emergence of life and consciousness, writing that the standard neo-Darwinian view flies in the face of common sense.[17]: 5–6  He writes that mind is a basic aspect of nature, and that any philosophy of nature that cannot account for it is fundamentally misguided.[17]: 16ff  He argues that the principles that account for the emergence of life may be teleological, rather than materialist or mechanistic.[17]: 10  Despite Nagel's being an atheist and not a proponent of intelligent design (ID), his book was "praised by creationists", according to the New York Times.[4] Nagel writes in Mind and Cosmos that he disagrees with both ID defenders and their opponents, who argue that the only naturalistic alternative to ID is the current reductionist neo-Darwinian model.[17]: 12 

Nagel has argued that ID should not be rejected as non-scientific, for instance writing in 2008 that "ID is very different from creation science," and that the debate about ID "is clearly a scientific disagreement, not a disagreement between science and something else."[18] In 2009, he recommended Signature in the Cell by the philosopher and ID proponent Stephen C. Meyer in The Times Literary Supplement as one of his "Best Books of the Year."[19] Nagel does not accept Meyer's conclusions but endorsed Meyer's approach, and argued in Mind and Cosmos that Meyer and other ID proponents, David Berlinski and Michael Behe, "do not deserve the scorn with which they are commonly met."[17]: 10 

Ethics edit

Nagel's Rawlsian approach edit

Nagel has been highly influential in the related fields of moral and political philosophy. Supervised by John Rawls, he has been a longstanding proponent of a Kantian and rationalist approach to moral philosophy. His distinctive ideas were first presented in the short monograph The Possibility of Altruism, published in 1970. That book seeks by reflection on the nature of practical reasoning to uncover the formal principles that underlie reason in practice and the related general beliefs about the self that are necessary for those principles to be truly applicable to us. Nagel defends motivated desire theory about the motivation of moral action. According to motivated desire theory, when a person is motivated to moral action it is indeed true that such actions are motivated, like all intentional actions, by a belief and a desire. But it is important to get the justificatory relations right: when a person accepts a moral judgment they are necessarily motivated to act. But it is the reason that does the justificatory work of justifying both the action and the desire. Nagel contrasts this view with a rival view which believes that a moral agent can only accept that they have a reason to act if the desire to carry out the action has an independent justification. An account based on presupposing sympathy would be of this kind.[20]

The most striking claim of the book is that there is a very close parallel between prudential reasoning in one's own interests and moral reasons to act to further the interests of another person. When one reasons prudentially, for example about the future reasons that one will have, one allows the reason in the future to justify one's current action without reference to the strength of one's current desires. If a hurricane were to destroy someone's car next year, at that point they will want their insurance company to pay them to replace it: that future reason gives them a reason to take out insurance now. The strength of the reason ought not to be hostage to the strength of one's current desires. The denial of this view of prudence, Nagel argues, means that one does not really believe that one is one and the same person through time. One is dissolving oneself into distinct person-stages.[21]

Altruistic action edit

This is the basis of his analogy between prudential actions and moral actions: in cases of altruistic action for another person's good that person's reasons quite literally become reasons for one if they are timeless and intrinsic reasons. Genuine reasons are reasons for anyone. Like the 19th-century moral philosopher Henry Sidgwick, Nagel believes that one must conceive of one's good as an impersonal good and one's reasons as objective reasons. That means, practically, that a timeless and intrinsic value generates reasons for anyone. A person who denies the truth of this claim is committed, as in the case of a similar mistake about prudence, to a false view of themself. In this case the false view is that one's reasons are irreducibly theirs, in a way that does not allow them to be reasons for anyone: Nagel argues this commits such a person to the view that they cannot make the same judgments about their own reasons third-personally that they can make first-personally. Nagel calls this "dissociation" and considers it a practical analogue of solipsism (the philosophical idea that only one's own mind is sure to exist). Once again, a false view of what is involved in reasoning properly is refuted by showing that it leads to a false view of people's nature.

Subjective and objective reasons edit

Nagel's later work on ethics ceases to place as much weight on the distinction between a person's personal or "subjective" reasons and their "objective" reasons. Earlier, in The Possibility of Altruism, he took the stance that if one's reasons really are about intrinsic and timeless values then, qua subjective reason, one can only take them to be the guise of the reasons that there really are: the objective ones. In later discussions, Nagel treats his former view as an incomplete attempt to convey the fact that there are distinct classes of reasons and values, and speaks instead of "agent-relative" and "agent-neutral" reasons. In the case of agent-relative reasons (the successor to subjective reasons), specifying the content of the reason makes essential reference back to the agent for whom it is a reason. An example of this might be: "Anyone has a reason to honor his or her parents." By contrast, in the case of agent-neutral reasons (the successor to objective reasons) specifying the content of the reason does not make any essential reference back to the person for whom it is a reason. An example of this might be: "Anyone has a reason to promote the good of parenthood."

Objective reasons edit

The different classes of reasons and values (i.e., agent-relative and agent-neutral) emphasized in Nagel's later work are situated within a Sidgwickian model in which one's moral commitments are thought of objectively, such that one's personal reasons and values are simply incomplete parts of an impersonal whole. The structure of Nagel's later ethical view is that all reasons must be brought into relation to this objective view of oneself. Reasons and values that withstand detached critical scrutiny are objective, but more subjective reasons and values can nevertheless be objectively tolerated. However, the most striking part of the earlier argument and of Sidgwick's view is preserved: agent-neutral reasons are literally reasons for anyone, so all objectifiable reasons become individually possessed no matter whose they are. Thinking reflectively about ethics from this standpoint, one must take every other agent's standpoint on value as seriously as one's own, since one's own perspective is just a subjective take on an inter-subjective whole; one's personal set of reasons is thus swamped by the objective reasons of all others.

World agent views edit

This is similar to "world agent" consequentialist views in which one takes up the standpoint of a collective subject whose reasons are those of everyone. But Nagel remains an individualist who believes in the separateness of persons, so his task is to explain why this objective viewpoint does not swallow up the individual standpoint of each of us. He provides an extended rationale for the importance to people of their personal point of view. The result is a hybrid ethical theory of the kind defended by Nagel's Princeton PhD student Samuel Scheffler in The Rejection of Consequentialism. The objective standpoint and its demands have to be balanced with the subjective personal point of view of each person and its demands. One can always be maximally objective, but one does not have to be. One can legitimately "cap" the demands placed on oneself by the objective reasons of others. In addition, in his later work, Nagel finds a rationale for so-called deontic constraints in a way Scheffler could not. Following Warren Quinn and Frances Kamm, Nagel grounds them on the inviolability of persons.

Political philosophy edit

The extent to which one can lead a good life as an individual while respecting the demands of others leads inevitably to political philosophy. In the Locke lectures published as the book Equality and Partiality, Nagel exposes John Rawls's theory of justice to detailed scrutiny. Once again, Nagel places such weight on the objective point of view and its requirements that he finds Rawls's view of liberal equality not demanding enough. Rawls's aim to redress, not remove, the inequalities that arise from class and talent seems to Nagel to lead to a view that does not sufficiently respect the needs of others. He recommends a gradual move to much more demanding conceptions of equality, motivated by the special nature of political responsibility. Normally, people draw a distinction between what people do and what people fail to bring about, but this thesis, true of individuals, does not apply to the state, which is a collective agent. A Rawlsian state permits intolerable inequalities and people need to develop a more ambitious view of equality to do justice to the demands of the objective recognition of the reasons of others. For Nagel, honoring the objective point of view demands nothing less.

Atheism edit

In Mind and Cosmos, Nagel writes that he is an atheist: "I lack the sensus divinitatis that enables—indeed compels—so many people to see in the world the expression of divine purpose as naturally as they see in a smiling face the expression of human feeling."[17] In The Last Word, he wrote, "I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well-informed people I know are religious believers. It isn't just that I don't believe in God and, naturally, hope that I'm right in my belief. It’s that I hope there is no God! I don’t want there to be a God; I don’t want the universe to be like that."[22]

Experience itself as a good edit

Nagel has said, "There are elements which, if added to one's experience, make life better; there are other elements which if added to one's experience, make life worse. But what remains when these are set aside is not merely neutral: it is emphatically positive. ... The additional positive weight is supplied by experience itself, rather than by any of its consequences."[23][24]

Personal life edit

Nagel married Doris Blum in 1954, divorcing in 1973. In 1979, he married Anne Hollander, who died in 2014.[6]

Awards edit

Nagel received the 1996 PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay for Other Minds (1995). He has also been awarded the Balzan Prize in Moral Philosophy (2008), the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (2008) and the Distinguished Achievement Award of the Mellon Foundation (2006).[4]

Selected publications edit

Books edit

  • Nagel, Thomas (1970). The possibility of altruism. Princeton, N.J: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780691020020. (Reprinted in 1978, Princeton University Press.)
  • Nagel, Thomas; Held, Virginia; Morgenbesser, Sidney (1974). Philosophy, morality, and international affairs: essays edited for the Society for Philosophy and Public Affairs. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195017595.
  • Nagel, Thomas (1979). Mortal questions. London: Canto. ISBN 9780521406765.
  • Nagel, Thomas (1986). The view from nowhere. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195056440.
  • Nagel, Thomas (1987). What does it all mean?: a very short introduction to philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195174373.
  • Nagel, Thomas (1991). Equality and partiality. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195098396.
  • Nagel, Thomas (1997). The last word. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195149838.[25]
  • Nagel, Thomas (1999). Other minds: critical essays, 1969–1994. New York Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195132465.
  • Nagel, Thomas; Murphy, Liam (2002). The myth of ownership : taxes and justice. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195176568.
  • Nagel, Thomas (2002). Concealment and exposure: and other essays. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195152937.
  • Nagel, Thomas (2010). Secular philosophy and the religious temperament: essays 2002–2008. Oxford New York, N.Y: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195394115.
  • Nagel, Thomas (2012). Mind and Cosmos: why the materialist neo-Darwinian conception of nature is almost certainly false. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780199919758

Articles edit

  • 1959, "Hobbes's Concept of Obligation", Philosophical Review, pp. 68–83.
  • 1959, "Dreaming", Analysis, pp. 112–6.
  • 1965, "Physicalism", Philosophical Review, pp. 339–56.
  • 1969, "Sexual Perversion", Journal of Philosophy, pp. 5–17 (repr. in Mortal Questions).
  • 1969, "The Boundaries of Inner Space", Journal of Philosophy, pp. 452–8.
  • 1970, "Death", Nous, pp. 73–80 (repr. in Mortal Questions).
  • 1970, "Armstrong on the Mind", Philosophical Review, pp. 394–403 (a discussion review of A Materialist Theory of the Mind by D. M. Armstrong).
  • 1971, "Brain Bisection and the Unity of Consciousness", Synthese, pp. 396–413 (repr. in Mortal Questions).
  • 1971, "The Absurd", Journal of Philosophy, pp. 716–27 (repr. in Mortal Questions).
  • 1972, "War and Massacre", Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 1, pp. 123–44 (repr. in Mortal Questions).
  • 1973, "Rawls on Justice", Philosophical Review, pp. 220–34 (a discussion review of A Theory of Justice by John Rawls).
  • 1973, "Equal Treatment and Compensatory Discrimination", Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 2, pp. 348–62.
  • 1974, "What Is it Like to Be a Bat?", Philosophical Review, pp. 435–50 (repr. in Mortal Questions). Online text
  • 1976, "Moral Luck", Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary vol. 50, pp. 137–55 (repr. in Mortal Questions).
  • 1979, "The Meaning of Equality", Washington University Law Quarterly, pp. 25–31.
  • 1981, "Tactical Nuclear Weapons and the Ethics of Conflict", Parameters: Journal of the U.S. Army War College, pp. 327–8.
  • 1983, "The Objective Self", in Carl Ginet and Sydney Shoemaker (eds.), Knowledge and Mind, Oxford University Press, pp. 211–232.
  • 1987, "Moral Conflict and Political Legitimacy", Philosophy & Public Affairs, pp. 215–240.
  • 1994, "Consciousness and Objective Reality", in R. Warner and T. Szubka (eds.), The Mind-Body Problem, Blackwell.
  • 1995, "Personal Rights and Public Space", Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 24, no. 2, pp. 83–107.
  • 1997, "Assisted Suicide: The Philosophers' Brief" (with R. Dworkin, R. Nozick, J. Rawls, T. Scanlon, and J. J. Thomson), New York Review of Books, March 27, 1997.
  • 1998, "Reductionism and Antireductionism", in The Limits of Reductionism in Biology, Novartis Symposium 213, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 3–10.
  • 1998, "Concealment and Exposure", Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 3–30. Online text
  • 1998, "Conceiving the Impossible and the Mind-Body Problem", Philosophy, vol. 73, no. 285, pp. 337–352. Online PDF 2006-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • 2000, "The Psychophysical Nexus", in Paul Boghossian and Christopher Peacocke (eds.) New Essays on the A Priori, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 432–471. Online PDF 2006-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • 2003, "Rawls and Liberalism", in Samuel Freeman (ed.) The Cambridge Companion to Rawls, Cambridge University Press, pp. 62–85.
  • 2003, "John Rawls and Affirmative Action", The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, no. 39, pp. 82–4.
  • 2008, "Public Education and Intelligent Design", Philosophy and Public Affairs
  • 2009, "The I in Me", a review article of Selves: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics by Galen Strawson, Oxford, 448 pp, ISBN 0-19-825006-1, lrb.co.uk
  • 2021, Thomas Nagel, "Types of Intuition: Thomas Nagel on human rights and moral knowledge", London Review of Books, vol. 43, no. 11 (3 June 2021), pp. 3, 5–6, 8. Deontology, consequentialism, utilitarianism.
  • 2023: "Leader of the Martians" (review of M.W. Rowe, J.L. Austin: Philosopher and D-Day Intelligence Officer, Oxford, May 2023, ISBN 978 0 19 870758 5, 660 pp.), London Review of Books, vol. 45, no. 17 (7 September 2023), pp. 9–10. "I [the reviewer, Thomas Nagel] was one of Austin's last students..." (p. 10.) A quotation from J.L. Austin: "Is it not possible that the next century may see the birth... of a true and comprehensive science of language? Then we shall have rid ourselves of one more part of philosophy... in the only way we ever can get rid of philosophy, by kicking it upstairs." (p. 10.)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nagel, Thomas, 1979, "Panpsychism", in Nagel, Thomas (1979). Mortal questions. London: Canto. pp. 181–195.
  2. ^ Coleman, Sam (2018). "The Evolution of Nagel's Panpsychism" (PDF). Klesis. 41. Retrieved September 19, 2019.
  3. ^ "Thomas Nagel". as.nyu.edu. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d "Thomas Nagel – Biography". NYU School of Law. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  5. ^ "Thomas Nagel - Overview | NYU School of Law". its.law.nyu.edu. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Nagel, Thomas 1937-". Encyclopedia.com. November 24, 2021. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  7. ^ a b "jewniversity-corner-what-makes-life-worthwhile-what-is-the-meaning-of-life-thomas-nagel-1.460387". www.thejc.com. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on July 5, 2018.
  9. ^ Nagel, Thomas (2009). "Analytic Philosophy and Human Life". Economia Politica. 26 (1).
  10. ^ Pogge, Thomas Winfried Menko (2007). John Rawls: His Life and Theory of Justice. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513636-4.
  11. ^ a b "Nagel's CV at NYU" (PDF). Myu.edu. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  12. ^ . May 12, 2008. Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. Retrieved September 20, 2008.
  13. ^ "Balzan Prize 2008 (1 Million Swiss Francs) Awarded for Moral Philosophy". Apaonline.org. Retrieved September 30, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ "Oxford University Gazette, 20 June 2008: Encaenia 2008". Ox.ac.uk. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  15. ^ Nagel, Thomas. 1986, The View from Nowhere. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Chapter VI.
  16. ^ Nagel, "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?" (1974), p. 436.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Nagel, Thomas (2012). Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-991975-8.
  18. ^ Nagel, Thomas. (2008). "Public education and intelligent design," Philosophy & Public Affairs, 36(2), pp. 187–205
  19. ^ "Arguments: Thomas Nagel and Stephen C. Meyer's Signature in the Cell - TLS". The-tls.co.uk. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
  20. ^ Pyka, Marek (2005). "Thomas Nagel on Mind, Morality, and Political Theory". American Journal of Theology & Philosophy. 26 (1/2): 85–95. ISSN 0194-3448. JSTOR 27944340.
  21. ^ Liu, JeeLoo (May 2012). "Moral Reason, Moral Sentiments and the Realization of Altruism: A Motivational Theory of Altruism". Asian Philosophy. 22 (2): 93–119. doi:10.1080/09552367.2012.692534. S2CID 11457496.
  22. ^ Nagel, Thomas, The Last Word, Oxford University Press, 1997, P. 130
  23. ^ The full quotation is "... the natural view that death is an evil because it brings to an end all the goods that life contains. We need not give an account of these goods here, except to observe that some of them, like perception, desire, activity, and thought, are so general as to be constitutive of human life. They are widely regarded as formidable benefits in themselves, despite the fact that they are conditions of misery as well as of happiness, and that a sufficient quantity of more particular evils can perhaps outweigh them. That is what is meant, I think by the allegation that it is good simply to be alive, even if one is undergoing terrible experiences. The situation is roughly this: There are elements which, it added to one's experience, make life better; there are other elements which if added to one's experience, make life worse. But what remains when these are set aside is not merely neutral: it is emphatically positive. Therefore life is worth living even when the bad elements of experience are plentiful, and the good ones too meager to outweigh the bad ones on their own. The additional positive weight is supplied by experience itself, rather than by any of its consequences." 'Death' (essay), Thomas Nagel, CUP, 1979 http://dbanach.com/death.htm Note that the paragraph in the earlier 1970 version of the essay published in Nous; Death Author(s): Thomas Nagel Source: Noûs, Vol. 4, No. 1 (Feb ... static1.1.sqspcdn.com/static/f/1011404/27295252/.../Nagel_Death.pdf?token... https://faculty.arts.ubc.ca/maydede/mind/Nagel_Death.pdf ends at "perhaps outweigh them."
  24. ^ Rhys Southan explains such ordinary experiences as having value "... because of the almost unbelievable fact that there is a world at all, and that we're conscious beings who get to be in it, feelings its sensations, and interacting with it and other similarly improbable existers." http://www.oxonianreview.org/wp/the-vise-side-of-life/
  25. ^ Larmore, Charles (October 1998). "Review: The Last Word by Thomas Nagel". Ethics. 109 (1): 166–168. doi:10.1086/233878. JSTOR 10.1086/233878. S2CID 171277680.

Further reading edit

  • Thomas, Alan (2015), Thomas Nagel, Routledge.

External links edit

  • "Thomas Nagel". NYU. Dpt of Philosophy.
  • "Nagel's CV" (PDF). NYU.
  • "What is it like to be a bat?". Philosophical Review. LXXXIII (4): 435–450. October 1974. doi:10.2307/2183914. JSTOR 2183914.
  • "Thomas Nagel". The New York Review of Books.
Academic offices
New office Tanner Lecturer on Human Values
at Stanford University

1977–1978
Succeeded by
Preceded by Howison Lecturer in Philosophy
1987
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Barry Stroud
John Locke Lecturer
1989–1990
Succeeded by
Awards
Preceded by PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award
for the Art of the Essay

1996
Succeeded by
Preceded by Balzan Prize
2008
With: Wallace S. Broecker,
Maurizio Calvesi, and Ian Frazer
Succeeded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Preceded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Preceded by
Preceded by Rolf Schock Prize for Logic and Philosophy
2008
Succeeded by

thomas, nagel, born, july, 1937, american, philosopher, university, professor, philosophy, emeritus, york, university, where, taught, from, 1980, 2016, main, areas, philosophical, interest, legal, philosophy, political, philosophy, ethics, nagel, 1978born, 193. Thomas Nagel ˈ n eɪ ɡ el born July 4 1937 is an American philosopher He is the University Professor of Philosophy and Law Emeritus at New York University 3 where he taught from 1980 to 2016 4 His main areas of philosophical interest are legal philosophy political philosophy and ethics 5 Thomas NagelNagel in 1978Born 1937 07 04 July 4 1937 age 86 Belgrade Kingdom of Yugoslavia now Serbia NationalityAmericanSpousesDoris G Blum m 1958 div 1973 wbr Anne Hollander m 1979 died 2014 wbr AwardsBalzan Prize 2008 Rolf Schock Prize 2008 Academic backgroundAlma materCornell UniversityCorpus Christi College OxfordHarvard UniversityThesisAltruism 1963 Doctoral advisorJohn RawlsOther advisorsJ L AustinAcademic workDisciplinePhilosophySub disciplineEpistemologyethicslegal philosophyphilosophy of mindpolitical philosophySchool or traditionAnalytic philosophyInstitutionsNew York UniversityPrinceton UniversityUniversity of California BerkeleyDoctoral studentsMarcelo Alegre es Rebecca Goldstein Shelly Kagan Samuel Scheffler Susan WolfNotable worksThe Possibility of Altruism 1970 What Is It Like to Be a Bat 1974 Mortal Questions 1979 The View from Nowhere 1986 Equality and Partiality 1991 The Last Word 1997 Mind and Cosmos 2012 Notable ideasPanpsychism 1 2 subjective character of experiencewhat is it like to be a somethingNagel is known for his critique of material reductionist accounts of the mind particularly in his essay What Is It Like to Be a Bat 1974 and for his contributions to liberal moral and political theory in The Possibility of Altruism 1970 and subsequent writings He continued the critique of reductionism in Mind and Cosmos 2012 in which he argues against the neo Darwinian view of the emergence of consciousness Contents 1 Life and career 2 Philosophical work 2 1 Overview 2 2 Philosophy of mind 2 2 1 What is it like to be a something 2 2 2 Natural selection and consciousness 2 3 Ethics 2 3 1 Nagel s Rawlsian approach 2 3 2 Altruistic action 2 3 3 Subjective and objective reasons 2 3 4 Objective reasons 2 3 5 World agent views 2 3 6 Political philosophy 2 4 Atheism 2 5 Experience itself as a good 3 Personal life 4 Awards 5 Selected publications 5 1 Books 5 2 Articles 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife and career edit nbsp Nagel in 2008 teaching ethicsNagel was born on July 4 1937 in Belgrade Yugoslavia now Serbia to German Jewish refugees Carolyn Baer and Walter Nagel 6 7 He arrived in the US in 1939 and was raised in and around New York 7 He had no religious upbringing but regards himself as a Jew 8 Nagel received a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy from Cornell University in 1958 where he was a member of the Telluride House and was introduced to the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein He then attended the University of Oxford on a Fulbright Scholarship and received a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1960 there he studied with J L Austin and Paul Grice He received his Doctor of Philosophy degree in philosophy from Harvard University in 1963 4 9 At Harvard Nagel studied under John Rawls whom Nagel later called the most important political philosopher of the twentieth century 10 Nagel taught at the University of California Berkeley from 1963 to 1966 and at Princeton University from 1966 to 1980 where he trained many well known philosophers including Susan Wolf Shelly Kagan and Samuel Scheffler the last of whom is now his colleague at New York University Nagel is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a corresponding fellow of the British Academy and in 2006 was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society 11 He has held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities 11 In 2008 he was awarded a Rolf Schock Prize for his work in philosophy 12 the Balzan prize 13 and the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from the University of Oxford 14 Philosophical work editThis section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Thomas Nagel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Overview edit Nagel began to publish philosophy at age 22 his career now spans over 60 years of publication He thinks that each person owing to their capacity to reason instinctively seeks a unified world view but if this aspiration leads one to believe that there is only one way to understand our intellectual commitments whether about the external world knowledge or what our practical and moral reasons ought to be one errs For contingent limited and finite creatures no such unified world view is possible because ways of understanding are not always better when they are more objective Like the British philosopher Bernard Williams Nagel believes that the rise of modern science has permanently changed how people think of the world and our place in it A modern scientific understanding is one way of thinking about the world and our place in it that is more objective than the commonsense view it replaces It is more objective because it is less dependent on our peculiarities as the kinds of thinkers that people are Our modern scientific understanding involves the mathematicized understanding of the world represented by modern physics Understanding this bleached out view of the world draws on our capacities as purely rational thinkers and fails to account for the specific nature of our perceptual sensibility Nagel repeatedly returns to the distinction between primary and secondary qualities that is between primary qualities of objects like mass and shape which are mathematically and structurally describable independent of our sensory apparatuses and secondary qualities like taste and color which depend on our sensory apparatuses Despite what may seem like skepticism about the objective claims of science Nagel does not dispute that science describes the world that exists independently of us His contention rather is that a given way of understanding a subject matter should not be regarded as better simply for being more objective He argues that scientific understanding s attempt at an objective viewpoint a view from nowhere necessarily leaves out something essential when applied to the mind which inherently has a subjective point of view As such objective science is fundamentally unable to help people fully understand themselves In What Is It Like to Be a Bat and elsewhere he writes that science cannot describe what it is like to be a thinker who conceives of the world from a particular subjective perspective Nagel argues that some phenomena are not best grasped from a more objective perspective The standpoint of the thinker does not present itself to the thinker they are that standpoint One learns and uses mental concepts by being directly acquainted with one s own mind whereas any attempt to think more objectively about mentality would abstract away from this fact It would of its nature leave out what it is to be a thinker and that Nagel believes would be a falsely objectifying view Being a thinker is to have a subjective perspective on the world if one abstracts away from this perspective one leaves out what he sought to explain Nagel thinks that philosophers over impressed by the paradigm of the kind of objective understanding represented by modern science tend to produce theories of the mind that are falsely objectifying in precisely this kind of way They are right to be impressed modern science really is objective but wrong to take modern science to be the only paradigm of objectivity The kind of understanding that science represents does not apply to everything people would like to understand As a philosophical rationalist Nagel believes that a proper understanding of the place of mental properties in nature will involve a revolution in our understanding of both the physical and the mental and that this is a reasonable prospect that people can anticipate in the near future A plausible science of the mind will give an account of the stuff that underpins mental and physical properties in such a way that people will simply be able to see that it necessitates both of these aspects Now it seems to people that the mental and the physical are irreducibly distinct but that is not a metaphysical insight or an acknowledgment of an irreducible explanatory gap but simply where people are at their present stage of understanding Nagel s rationalism and tendency to present human nature as composite structured around our capacity to reason explains why he thinks that therapeutic or deflationary accounts of philosophy are complacent and that radical skepticism is strictly speaking irrefutable clarification needed The therapeutic or deflationary philosopher influenced by Wittgenstein s later philosophy reconciles people to the dependence of our worldview on our form of life Nagel accuses Wittgenstein and American philosopher of mind and language Donald Davidson of philosophical idealism 15 Both ask people to take up an interpretative perspective to making sense of other speakers in the context of a shared objective world This for Nagel elevates contingent conditions of our makeup into criteria for what is real The result cuts the world down to size and makes what there is dependent on what there can be interpreted to be Nagel claims this is no better than more orthodox forms of idealism in which reality is claimed to be made up of mental items or constitutively dependent on a form supplied by the mind Philosophy of mind edit What is it like to be a something edit Further information What Is It Like to Be a Bat Nagel is probably most widely known in philosophy of mind as an advocate of the idea that consciousness and subjective experience cannot at least with the contemporary understanding of physicalism be satisfactorily explained with the concepts of physics This position was primarily discussed by Nagel in one of his most famous articles What Is It Like to Be a Bat 1974 The article s title question though often attributed to Nagel was originally asked by Timothy Sprigge The article was originally published in 1974 in The Philosophical Review and has been reprinted several times including in The Mind s I edited by Daniel Dennett and Douglas Hofstadter Readings in the Philosophy of Psychology edited by Ned Block Nagel s Mortal Questions 1979 The Nature of Mind edited by David M Rosenthal and Philosophy of Mind Classical and Contemporary Readings edited by David J Chalmers In What Is It Like to Be a Bat Nagel argues that consciousness has essential to it a subjective character a what it is like aspect He writes an organism has conscious mental states if and only if there is something that it is like to be that organism something it is like for the organism 16 His critics who have objected to what they see as a misguided attempt to argue from a fact about how one represents the world trivially one can only do so from one s point of view to a false claim about the world that it somehow has first personal perspectives built into it On that understanding Nagel is a conventional dualist about the physical and the mental This is however a misunderstanding according to whom Nagel s point is that there is a constraint on what it is to possess the concept of a mental state namely that one be directly acquainted with it Concepts of mental states are only made available to a thinker who can be acquainted with their own states clearly the possession and use of physical concepts has no corresponding constraint Part of the puzzlement here is because of the limitations of imagination influenced by his Princeton colleague Saul Kripke Nagel believes that any type identity statement that identifies a physical state type with a mental state type would be if true necessarily true But Kripke argues that one can easily imagine a situation where for example one s C fibres are stimulated but one is not in pain and so refute any such psychophysical identity from the armchair A parallel argument does not hold for genuine theoretical identities This argument that there will always be an explanatory gap between an identification of a state in mental and physical terms is compounded Nagel argues by the fact that imagination operates in two distinct ways When asked to imagine sensorily one imagines C fibres being stimulated if asked to imagine sympathetically one puts oneself in a conscious state resembling pain These two ways of imagining the two terms of the identity statement are so different that there will always seem to be an explanatory gap whether or not this is the case Some philosophers of mind who have taken these arguments as helpful for physicalism on the grounds that it exposes a limitation that makes the existence of an explanatory gap seem compelling while others who have argued that this makes the case for physicalism even more impossible as it cannot be defended even in principle Nagel is not a physicalist because he does not believe that an internal understanding of mental concepts shows them to have the kind of hidden essence that underpins a scientific identity in say chemistry But his skepticism is about current physics he envisages in his most recent work that people may be close to a scientific breakthrough in identifying an underlying essence that is neither physical as people currently think of the physical nor functional nor mental but such that it necessitates all three of these ways in which the mind appears to us The difference between the kind of explanation he rejects and the kind he accepts depends on his understanding of transparency from his earliest work to his most recent Nagel has always insisted that a prior context is required to make identity statements plausible intelligible and transparent Natural selection and consciousness edit Further information Mind and Cosmos In his 2012 book Mind and Cosmos Nagel argues against a materialist view of the emergence of life and consciousness writing that the standard neo Darwinian view flies in the face of common sense 17 5 6 He writes that mind is a basic aspect of nature and that any philosophy of nature that cannot account for it is fundamentally misguided 17 16ff He argues that the principles that account for the emergence of life may be teleological rather than materialist or mechanistic 17 10 Despite Nagel s being an atheist and not a proponent of intelligent design ID his book was praised by creationists according to the New York Times 4 Nagel writes in Mind and Cosmos that he disagrees with both ID defenders and their opponents who argue that the only naturalistic alternative to ID is the current reductionist neo Darwinian model 17 12 Nagel has argued that ID should not be rejected as non scientific for instance writing in 2008 that ID is very different from creation science and that the debate about ID is clearly a scientific disagreement not a disagreement between science and something else 18 In 2009 he recommended Signature in the Cell by the philosopher and ID proponent Stephen C Meyer in The Times Literary Supplement as one of his Best Books of the Year 19 Nagel does not accept Meyer s conclusions but endorsed Meyer s approach and argued in Mind and Cosmos that Meyer and other ID proponents David Berlinski and Michael Behe do not deserve the scorn with which they are commonly met 17 10 Ethics edit Nagel s Rawlsian approach edit Nagel has been highly influential in the related fields of moral and political philosophy Supervised by John Rawls he has been a longstanding proponent of a Kantian and rationalist approach to moral philosophy His distinctive ideas were first presented in the short monograph The Possibility of Altruism published in 1970 That book seeks by reflection on the nature of practical reasoning to uncover the formal principles that underlie reason in practice and the related general beliefs about the self that are necessary for those principles to be truly applicable to us Nagel defends motivated desire theory about the motivation of moral action According to motivated desire theory when a person is motivated to moral action it is indeed true that such actions are motivated like all intentional actions by a belief and a desire But it is important to get the justificatory relations right when a person accepts a moral judgment they are necessarily motivated to act But it is the reason that does the justificatory work of justifying both the action and the desire Nagel contrasts this view with a rival view which believes that a moral agent can only accept that they have a reason to act if the desire to carry out the action has an independent justification An account based on presupposing sympathy would be of this kind 20 The most striking claim of the book is that there is a very close parallel between prudential reasoning in one s own interests and moral reasons to act to further the interests of another person When one reasons prudentially for example about the future reasons that one will have one allows the reason in the future to justify one s current action without reference to the strength of one s current desires If a hurricane were to destroy someone s car next year at that point they will want their insurance company to pay them to replace it that future reason gives them a reason to take out insurance now The strength of the reason ought not to be hostage to the strength of one s current desires The denial of this view of prudence Nagel argues means that one does not really believe that one is one and the same person through time One is dissolving oneself into distinct person stages 21 Altruistic action edit This is the basis of his analogy between prudential actions and moral actions in cases of altruistic action for another person s good that person s reasons quite literally become reasons for one if they are timeless and intrinsic reasons Genuine reasons are reasons for anyone Like the 19th century moral philosopher Henry Sidgwick Nagel believes that one must conceive of one s good as an impersonal good and one s reasons as objective reasons That means practically that a timeless and intrinsic value generates reasons for anyone A person who denies the truth of this claim is committed as in the case of a similar mistake about prudence to a false view of themself In this case the false view is that one s reasons are irreducibly theirs in a way that does not allow them to be reasons for anyone Nagel argues this commits such a person to the view that they cannot make the same judgments about their own reasons third personally that they can make first personally Nagel calls this dissociation and considers it a practical analogue of solipsism the philosophical idea that only one s own mind is sure to exist Once again a false view of what is involved in reasoning properly is refuted by showing that it leads to a false view of people s nature Subjective and objective reasons edit Nagel s later work on ethics ceases to place as much weight on the distinction between a person s personal or subjective reasons and their objective reasons Earlier in The Possibility of Altruism he took the stance that if one s reasons really are about intrinsic and timeless values then qua subjective reason one can only take them to be the guise of the reasons that there really are the objective ones In later discussions Nagel treats his former view as an incomplete attempt to convey the fact that there are distinct classes of reasons and values and speaks instead of agent relative and agent neutral reasons In the case of agent relative reasons the successor to subjective reasons specifying the content of the reason makes essential reference back to the agent for whom it is a reason An example of this might be Anyone has a reason to honor his or her parents By contrast in the case of agent neutral reasons the successor to objective reasons specifying the content of the reason does not make any essential reference back to the person for whom it is a reason An example of this might be Anyone has a reason to promote the good of parenthood Objective reasons edit The different classes of reasons and values i e agent relative and agent neutral emphasized in Nagel s later work are situated within a Sidgwickian model in which one s moral commitments are thought of objectively such that one s personal reasons and values are simply incomplete parts of an impersonal whole The structure of Nagel s later ethical view is that all reasons must be brought into relation to this objective view of oneself Reasons and values that withstand detached critical scrutiny are objective but more subjective reasons and values can nevertheless be objectively tolerated However the most striking part of the earlier argument and of Sidgwick s view is preserved agent neutral reasons are literally reasons for anyone so all objectifiable reasons become individually possessed no matter whose they are Thinking reflectively about ethics from this standpoint one must take every other agent s standpoint on value as seriously as one s own since one s own perspective is just a subjective take on an inter subjective whole one s personal set of reasons is thus swamped by the objective reasons of all others World agent views edit This is similar to world agent consequentialist views in which one takes up the standpoint of a collective subject whose reasons are those of everyone But Nagel remains an individualist who believes in the separateness of persons so his task is to explain why this objective viewpoint does not swallow up the individual standpoint of each of us He provides an extended rationale for the importance to people of their personal point of view The result is a hybrid ethical theory of the kind defended by Nagel s Princeton PhD student Samuel Scheffler in The Rejection of Consequentialism The objective standpoint and its demands have to be balanced with the subjective personal point of view of each person and its demands One can always be maximally objective but one does not have to be One can legitimately cap the demands placed on oneself by the objective reasons of others In addition in his later work Nagel finds a rationale for so called deontic constraints in a way Scheffler could not Following Warren Quinn and Frances Kamm Nagel grounds them on the inviolability of persons Political philosophy edit The extent to which one can lead a good life as an individual while respecting the demands of others leads inevitably to political philosophy In the Locke lectures published as the book Equality and Partiality Nagel exposes John Rawls s theory of justice to detailed scrutiny Once again Nagel places such weight on the objective point of view and its requirements that he finds Rawls s view of liberal equality not demanding enough Rawls s aim to redress not remove the inequalities that arise from class and talent seems to Nagel to lead to a view that does not sufficiently respect the needs of others He recommends a gradual move to much more demanding conceptions of equality motivated by the special nature of political responsibility Normally people draw a distinction between what people do and what people fail to bring about but this thesis true of individuals does not apply to the state which is a collective agent A Rawlsian state permits intolerable inequalities and people need to develop a more ambitious view of equality to do justice to the demands of the objective recognition of the reasons of others For Nagel honoring the objective point of view demands nothing less Atheism edit In Mind and Cosmos Nagel writes that he is an atheist I lack the sensus divinitatis that enables indeed compels so many people to see in the world the expression of divine purpose as naturally as they see in a smiling face the expression of human feeling 17 In The Last Word he wrote I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well informed people I know are religious believers It isn t just that I don t believe in God and naturally hope that I m right in my belief It s that I hope there is no God I don t want there to be a God I don t want the universe to be like that 22 Experience itself as a good edit Nagel has said There are elements which if added to one s experience make life better there are other elements which if added to one s experience make life worse But what remains when these are set aside is not merely neutral it is emphatically positive The additional positive weight is supplied by experience itself rather than by any of its consequences 23 24 Personal life editNagel married Doris Blum in 1954 divorcing in 1973 In 1979 he married Anne Hollander who died in 2014 6 Awards editNagel received the 1996 PEN Diamonstein Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay for Other Minds 1995 He has also been awarded the Balzan Prize in Moral Philosophy 2008 the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 2008 and the Distinguished Achievement Award of the Mellon Foundation 2006 4 Selected publications editBooks edit Nagel Thomas 1970 The possibility of altruism Princeton N J Oxford University Press ISBN 9780691020020 Reprinted in 1978 Princeton University Press Nagel Thomas Held Virginia Morgenbesser Sidney 1974 Philosophy morality and international affairs essays edited for the Society for Philosophy and Public Affairs New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195017595 Nagel Thomas 1979 Mortal questions London Canto ISBN 9780521406765 Nagel Thomas 1986 The view from nowhere New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195056440 Nagel Thomas 1987 What does it all mean a very short introduction to philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195174373 Nagel Thomas 1991 Equality and partiality New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195098396 Nagel Thomas 1997 The last word New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195149838 25 Nagel Thomas 1999 Other minds critical essays 1969 1994 New York Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195132465 Nagel Thomas Murphy Liam 2002 The myth of ownership taxes and justice Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195176568 Nagel Thomas 2002 Concealment and exposure and other essays Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195152937 Nagel Thomas 2010 Secular philosophy and the religious temperament essays 2002 2008 Oxford New York N Y Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195394115 Nagel Thomas 2012 Mind and Cosmos why the materialist neo Darwinian conception of nature is almost certainly false Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199919758Articles edit 1959 Hobbes s Concept of Obligation Philosophical Review pp 68 83 1959 Dreaming Analysis pp 112 6 1965 Physicalism Philosophical Review pp 339 56 1969 Sexual Perversion Journal of Philosophy pp 5 17 repr in Mortal Questions 1969 The Boundaries of Inner Space Journal of Philosophy pp 452 8 1970 Death Nous pp 73 80 repr in Mortal Questions 1970 Armstrong on the Mind Philosophical Review pp 394 403 a discussion review of A Materialist Theory of the Mind by D M Armstrong 1971 Brain Bisection and the Unity of Consciousness Synthese pp 396 413 repr in Mortal Questions 1971 The Absurd Journal of Philosophy pp 716 27 repr in Mortal Questions 1972 War and Massacre Philosophy amp Public Affairs vol 1 pp 123 44 repr in Mortal Questions 1973 Rawls on Justice Philosophical Review pp 220 34 a discussion review of A Theory of Justice by John Rawls 1973 Equal Treatment and Compensatory Discrimination Philosophy amp Public Affairs vol 2 pp 348 62 1974 What Is it Like to Be a Bat Philosophical Review pp 435 50 repr in Mortal Questions Online text 1976 Moral Luck Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary vol 50 pp 137 55 repr in Mortal Questions 1979 The Meaning of Equality Washington University Law Quarterly pp 25 31 1981 Tactical Nuclear Weapons and the Ethics of Conflict Parameters Journal of the U S Army War College pp 327 8 1983 The Objective Self in Carl Ginet and Sydney Shoemaker eds Knowledge and Mind Oxford University Press pp 211 232 1987 Moral Conflict and Political Legitimacy Philosophy amp Public Affairs pp 215 240 1994 Consciousness and Objective Reality in R Warner and T Szubka eds The Mind Body Problem Blackwell 1995 Personal Rights and Public Space Philosophy amp Public Affairs vol 24 no 2 pp 83 107 1997 Assisted Suicide The Philosophers Brief with R Dworkin R Nozick J Rawls T Scanlon and J J Thomson New York Review of Books March 27 1997 1998 Reductionism and Antireductionism in The Limits of Reductionism in Biology Novartis Symposium 213 John Wiley amp Sons pp 3 10 1998 Concealment and Exposure Philosophy amp Public Affairs vol 27 no 1 pp 3 30 Online text 1998 Conceiving the Impossible and the Mind Body Problem Philosophy vol 73 no 285 pp 337 352 Online PDF Archived 2006 09 01 at the Wayback Machine 2000 The Psychophysical Nexus in Paul Boghossian and Christopher Peacocke eds New Essays on the A Priori Oxford Clarendon Press pp 432 471 Online PDF Archived 2006 09 01 at the Wayback Machine 2003 Rawls and Liberalism in Samuel Freeman ed The Cambridge Companion to Rawls Cambridge University Press pp 62 85 2003 John Rawls and Affirmative Action The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education no 39 pp 82 4 2008 Public Education and Intelligent Design Philosophy and Public Affairs 2009 The I in Me a review article of Selves An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics by Galen Strawson Oxford 448 pp ISBN 0 19 825006 1 lrb co uk 2021 Thomas Nagel Types of Intuition Thomas Nagel on human rights and moral knowledge London Review of Books vol 43 no 11 3 June 2021 pp 3 5 6 8 Deontology consequentialism utilitarianism 2023 Leader of the Martians review of M W Rowe J L Austin Philosopher and D Day Intelligence Officer Oxford May 2023 ISBN 978 0 19 870758 5 660 pp London Review of Books vol 45 no 17 7 September 2023 pp 9 10 I the reviewer Thomas Nagel was one of Austin s last students p 10 A quotation from J L Austin Is it not possible that the next century may see the birth of a true and comprehensive science of language Then we shall have rid ourselves of one more part of philosophy in the only way we ever can get rid of philosophy by kicking it upstairs p 10 See also editAmerican philosophy List of American philosophers New York University Department of Philosophy David Chalmers Frank Jackson Galen Strawson Hard problem of consciousness Knowledge argumentReferences edit Nagel Thomas 1979 Panpsychism in Nagel Thomas 1979 Mortal questions London Canto pp 181 195 Coleman Sam 2018 The Evolution of Nagel s Panpsychism PDF Klesis 41 Retrieved September 19 2019 Thomas Nagel as nyu edu Retrieved August 19 2019 a b c d Thomas Nagel Biography NYU School of Law Retrieved March 7 2017 Thomas Nagel Overview NYU School of Law its law nyu edu Retrieved August 19 2019 a b Nagel Thomas 1937 Encyclopedia com November 24 2021 Retrieved December 6 2021 a b jewniversity corner what makes life worthwhile what is the meaning of life thomas nagel 1 460387 www thejc com Retrieved July 4 2018 Jewniversity corner What makes life worthwhile The Jewish Chronicle Archived from the original on July 5 2018 Nagel Thomas 2009 Analytic Philosophy and Human Life Economia Politica 26 1 Pogge Thomas Winfried Menko 2007 John Rawls His Life and Theory of Justice Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513636 4 a b Nagel s CV at NYU PDF Myu edu Retrieved October 31 2014 The Rolf Schock Prizes 2008 May 12 2008 Archived from the original on September 29 2008 Retrieved September 20 2008 Balzan Prize 2008 1 Million Swiss Francs Awarded for Moral Philosophy Apaonline org Retrieved September 30 2008 permanent dead link Oxford University Gazette 20 June 2008 Encaenia 2008 Ox ac uk Retrieved October 31 2014 Nagel Thomas 1986 The View from Nowhere Oxford Oxford University Press Chapter VI Nagel What Is It Like to Be a Bat 1974 p 436 a b c d e f Nagel Thomas 2012 Mind and Cosmos Why the Materialist Neo Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 991975 8 Nagel Thomas 2008 Public education and intelligent design Philosophy amp Public Affairs 36 2 pp 187 205 Arguments Thomas Nagel and Stephen C Meyer s Signature in the Cell TLS The tls co uk Retrieved October 31 2014 Pyka Marek 2005 Thomas Nagel on Mind Morality and Political Theory American Journal of Theology amp Philosophy 26 1 2 85 95 ISSN 0194 3448 JSTOR 27944340 Liu JeeLoo May 2012 Moral Reason Moral Sentiments and the Realization of Altruism A Motivational Theory of Altruism Asian Philosophy 22 2 93 119 doi 10 1080 09552367 2012 692534 S2CID 11457496 Nagel Thomas The Last Word Oxford University Press 1997 P 130 The full quotation is the natural view that death is an evil because it brings to an end all the goods that life contains We need not give an account of these goods here except to observe that some of them like perception desire activity and thought are so general as to be constitutive of human life They are widely regarded as formidable benefits in themselves despite the fact that they are conditions of misery as well as of happiness and that a sufficient quantity of more particular evils can perhaps outweigh them That is what is meant I think by the allegation that it is good simply to be alive even if one is undergoing terrible experiences The situation is roughly this There are elements which it added to one s experience make life better there are other elements which if added to one s experience make life worse But what remains when these are set aside is not merely neutral it is emphatically positive Therefore life is worth living even when the bad elements of experience are plentiful and the good ones too meager to outweigh the bad ones on their own The additional positive weight is supplied by experience itself rather than by any of its consequences Death essay Thomas Nagel CUP 1979 http dbanach com death htm Note that the paragraph in the earlier 1970 version of the essay published in Nous Death Author s Thomas Nagel Source Nous Vol 4 No 1 Feb static1 1 sqspcdn com static f 1011404 27295252 Nagel Death pdf token https faculty arts ubc ca maydede mind Nagel Death pdf ends at perhaps outweigh them Rhys Southan explains such ordinary experiences as having value because of the almost unbelievable fact that there is a world at all and that we re conscious beings who get to be in it feelings its sensations and interacting with it and other similarly improbable existers http www oxonianreview org wp the vise side of life Larmore Charles October 1998 Review The Last Word by Thomas Nagel Ethics 109 1 166 168 doi 10 1086 233878 JSTOR 10 1086 233878 S2CID 171277680 Further reading editThomas Alan 2015 Thomas Nagel Routledge External links editThomas Nagel at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Thomas Nagel NYU Dpt of Philosophy Nagel s CV PDF NYU What is it like to be a bat Philosophical Review LXXXIII 4 435 450 October 1974 doi 10 2307 2183914 JSTOR 2183914 Thomas Nagel The New York Review of Books Academic officesNew office Tanner Lecturer on Human Valuesat Stanford University1977 1978 Succeeded byAmartya SenPreceded byMichael Dummett Howison Lecturer in Philosophy1987 Succeeded byBernard WilliamsVacantTitle last held byBarry Stroud John Locke Lecturer1989 1990 Succeeded byJohn McDowellAwardsPreceded byJ B Jackson PEN Diamonstein Spielvogel Awardfor the Art of the Essay1996 Succeeded byCynthia OzickPreceded byBruce Beutler Balzan Prize2008 With Wallace S Broecker Maurizio Calvesi and Ian Frazer Succeeded byTerence CavePreceded byKarlheinz Bohm Succeeded byMichael GratzelPreceded byThe Lady Higgins Succeeded byBrenda MilnerPreceded byJules A HoffmannPreceded bySumio Iijima Succeeded byPaolo Rossi MontiPreceded byMichel ZinkPreceded byJaakko Hintikka Rolf Schock Prize for Logic and Philosophy2008 Succeeded byHilary Putnam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Nagel amp oldid 1184332112, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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