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Robert Adamson (1852-1902)
Scottish
philosopher, was born in Edinburgh on the igih of January 1852.
His father was a solicitor, and his mother was the daughter of
Matthew Buist, factor to Lord Haddington. In 1855 Mrs Adamson
was left a widow with small means, and devoted herself entirely
to the education of her six children. Of these, Robert was successful
from the first. At the end of his school career he entered the
university of Edinburgh at the age of fourteen, and four years
later graduated with first-class honours in mental philosophy,
with prizes in every department of the faculty of Arts. He completed
his university successes by winning the Tyndall-Bruce scholarship,
the Hamilton fellowship (1872), the Ferguson scholarship (1872)
and the Shaw fellowship (1873).
After
a short residence at Heidelberg (1871), where he began his study
of German philosophy, he returned to Edinburgh as assistant first
to Henry Calderwood and later to A. Campbell Fraser; he joined
the staff of the Encyclopaedia Britannica and studied widely in
the Advocates' Library. In 1876 he came to England as successor
to W. S. Jevons in the chair of logic and philosophy, at Owens
College, Manchester. In 1883 he received the honorary degree of
LL.D. In 1893 he went to Aberdeen, and finally in 1895 to the
chair of logic at Glasgow, which he held till his death in February
1902.
His
wife, Margaret Duncan, the daughter of a Manchester merchant,
was a woman of kindred tastes, and their union was entirely happy.
It is matter for regret to the student that Adamson's active labours
in the lecture room precluded him from systematic production.
His writings consisted of short articles, of which many appeared
in the Encyclopaedia Britannica and in Mind.
At
the time of his death he was writing a History of Psychology,
and had promised a work on Kant and the Modern Naturalists. Both
in his life and in his writings he was remarkable for impartiality.
It was his peculiar virtue that he could quote his opponents without
warping their meaning. From this point of view he would have been
perhaps the first historian of philosophy of his time, had his
professional labours been less exacting. Except during the first
few years at Manchester, he delivered his lectures without manuscripts.
In 1903, under the title The Development of Modern Philosophy
and Other Essays, his more important lectures were published with
a short biographical introduction by Prof. W. R. Sorley of Cambridge
University. Most of the matter is taken verbatim from the note-book
of one of his students. Under the same editorship there appeared,
three years later, his Development of Greek Philosophy. In addition
to his professional work, he did much administrative work for
Victoria University and the university of Glasgow. In the organization
of Victoria University he took a foremost part, and, as chairman
of the Board of Studies at Owens College, he presided over the
general academical board of the Victoria University.
At
Glasgow he was soon elected one of the representatives on the
court, and to him were due in large measure the extension of the
academical session and the improved equipment of the university.
Throughout his lectures, Adamson pursued the critical and historical
method without formulating a constructive theory of his own. He
felt that any philosophical advance must be based on the Kantian
methods. It was his habit to make straight for the ultimate issue,
disregarding half-truths and declining compromise. He left a hypothesis
to be worked out by others; this done, he would criticize with
all the rigour of logic, and with a profound distrust of imagination,
metaphor and the attitude known as the will-to-believe.
As
he grew older his metaphysical optimism waned. He felt that the
increase of knowledge must come in the domains of physical science.
But this empirical tendency as regards science never modified
his metaphysical outlook. He has been called Kantian and Neo-Kantian,
Realist and Idealist (by himself, for he held that appearance
and reality are co-extensive and coincident). At the same time,
in his criticism of other views he was almost typical of Hegelian
idealism.
All
processes of reasoning or judgment (i.e. all units of thought)
are (i) analysable only by abstraction, and (2) are compound of
deduction and induction, i.e. rational and empirical. An illustration
of his empirical tendency is found in his attitude to the Absolute
and the Self. The "Absolute" doctrines he regarded as a mere disguise
of failure, a dishonest attempt to clothe ignorance in the pretentious
garb of mystery. The Self as a primary, determining entity, he
would not therefore admit. He represented an empiricism which,
so far from refuting, was actually based on, idealism, and yet
was alert to expose the fallacies of a particular idealist construction.
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