Name Jonathan Bennett | Role Philosopher | |
Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada Books Locke - Berkeley - Hume: C, A Philosophical Guide to, Learning from Six Philosop, The Act Itself, A Study of Spinoza's Ethics |
Jonathan bennett reveals the one mean girls quote he can t escape toofab
Jonathan Francis Bennett (born 17 February 1930) is a British philosopher of language and metaphysics, and a historian of early modern philosophy.
Contents
- Jonathan bennett reveals the one mean girls quote he can t escape toofab
- Life and education
- Career
- Works
- References
Life and education
Jonathan Bennett was born in Greymouth, New Zealand to Francis Oswald Bennett and Pearl Allan Brash Bennett. His father was doctor and his mother a homemaker. He read philosophy at the University of Canterbury (formerly Canterbury University College) and was awarded his MA there in 1953. He then went to the University of Oxford where he was a member of Magdalen College, Oxford. He obtained his BPhil in 1955.
Career
Bennett's first academic post was as a Junior Lecturer at the University of Auckland, New Zealand (then Auckland University College) (1952). He was an Instructor in Philosophy at Haverford College (Pennsylvania) (1955-56), then a Lecturer in Moral Science (Philosophy) at the University of Cambridge (1956–68), then at Simon Fraser University (1968–70), the University of British Columbia (1970–79), and in 1979 he went to Syracuse University as Professor of Philosophy. He remained in this position until his retirement in 1997.
In 1980, he was the Tanner Lecturer at Brasenose College of Oxford University. His lectures were refined and published in his 1995 book The Act Itself. In this work he argues that letting someone die is as immoral as killing someone. This also applies to other harms that one commits or fails to prevent. This view has been widely discussed for example by Judith Jarvis Thomson
In 1992, he was the John Locke Lecturer at the University of Oxford giving lectures on 'Judging Behaviour: Analysis in Moral Theory'.
In 1985, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The British Academy extended him the same honor in 1991. In the same year he was awarded a LittD from the University of Cambridge. Bennett has written extensively on philosophy of mind, philosophy of language,events, conditionals, and consequentialist ethics. He is particularly renowned for his interpretations of major early modern philosophers and he has written five books in this area.. A Festscrift to commemmorate his 60th birthday was published in 1990.
Bennett's website is devoted to making the texts of early modern philosophers more accessible to today's students.
Works
Books
Selected journal articles