English philosophers thought they had sloughed off the dead weight of history, but history suggests otherwise
- Written by Andrew Milne, Lecturer in Philosophy, The University of Western Australia
Nikhil Krishnan’s intriguing and charming history, A Terribly Serious Adventure: Philosophy at Oxford 1900-60[1], is organised around anecdotes rather than arguments. Krishnan is interested not only in “what people thought but what they were like”.
The two questions are not as separate as many assume: a penetrating portrait of a philosopher can do much to illuminate their thought.
Review: A Terribly Serious Adventure: Philosophy at Oxford 1900-60 – Nikhil Krishnan (Profile Books)
The range of thinkers surveyed is quite broad. Krishnan’s history includes R.G. Collingwood[2], Gilbert Ryle[3], Isaiah Berlin[4], A.J. “Freddie” Ayer[5], J.L. Austin[6], Elizabeth Anscombe[7], Iris Murdoch[8], Peter Strawson[9] and Bernard Williams[10]. The portraits are for the most part sympathetically drawn, though naturally some of these philosophers have captured Krishnan more than others, Ryle and Austin especially.