Herbert Wildon Carr (16 January 1857 – 8 July 1931) was a British philosopher, Professor of Philosophy, King's College, London from 1918 until 1925 and Visiting Professor at the University of Southern California from 1925 until his death.
He was a student at King's College London where he was awarded the Jelf Medal.
Henri Bergson: the philosophy of change, London: Jack, 1911The Problem of Truth, New York: Dodge, 1913The Philosophy of Benedetto Croce, London: MacMillian, 1917The General Principle of Relativity in Its Philosophical and Historical Aspect, London: MacMillian, 1922L'Énergie spirituelle, Translated by H. Wildon Carr as Mind-Energy: Lectures and Essays, London: MacMillian, 1920A Theory of Monads: Outlines of the Philosophy of the Principle of Relativity, London: MacMillan, 1922Scientific Approach to Philosophy: Selected Essays and Reviews, London: MacMillan, 1924Changing Backgrounds in Religion and Ethics: A Metaphysical Meditation, New York: MacMillan, 1927The Unique Status of Man, in, American Journal of Sociology, 1928The Freewill Problem, London: Benn Ltd., 1928Leibniz, Boston: Little Brown, 1929