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| 牛津大学古希腊哲学研究专家J.L. Ackrill去世 | |||||
| 作者:佚名 新闻来源:The Times;Independent 点击数: 更新时间:2007-12-23 【哲学在线编辑】 | |||||
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牛津大学著名古希腊哲学研究专家J.L. Ackrill去世2007年11月30日去世,享年85岁。
Professor J.L. AckrillProfessor J.L. Ackrill, philosopher, was born on December 30, 1921. He died on November 30, 2007, aged 85Oxford philosopher who helped to introduce a new rigour to the study of classical texts![]() J.L. Ackrill, Professor of the History of Philosophy at Oxford, 1966-89, was one of the leading figures of the 20th century in the study of Ancient Greek philosophy. Claims about new beginnings and fresh starts in an academic discipline are sometimes too easily made. But in the late 1950s and the 1960s there was indeed a sea change in the study of ancient philosophy, thanks to Ackrill and a small handful of others, most notably Gregory Vlastos and Gwil Owen. It involved the conviction that one must bring to bear on ancient texts not only meticulous classical scholarship — that was not new — but also the utmost philosophical rigour and acuity. This revolution was prompted in part by the rise of so-called “ordinary language philosophy” and the interest sometimes displayed by Aristotle (though rarely by other Ancient philosophers) in appealing to “what we say”, which suggested a close community of interest between him and contemporary philosophers such as Austin and Ryle. The approach of Ackrill and others was not, however, restricted to the ordinary language perspective: the central idea was, as it remains, that of combining textual sensitivity with vigorous philosophical engagement. John Lloyd Ackrill was born in 1921. He was educated at Reading School, and went up to St John's College, Oxford, as a Thomas White scholar in Trinity Term 1940. There he formed a wide circle of acquaintances, including Kingsley Amis, John Wain, John Wilton and Leader Hawkins. After he had taken a first in Classical Mods his undergraduate career was interrupted by war service, which included a period with the General Staff in the somewhat unlikely role of a motorcycle dispatch rider in France — once memorably bearing a message for Field Marshal Montgomery in one pocket and a vial of cyanide to be taken in case of capture in the other. In Berlin in 1945 he was given early release to return to Oxford, where he took a first in Greats in 1948. His first academic post was as assistant lecturer in logic at the University of Glasgow, and after a year he was appointed to a new university lecturership in Ancient Philosophy in Oxford. This came with an initial two-year study leave, which he spent first in Switzerland and then at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where he worked with Harold Cherniss. He was to make several more visits to Princeton over the next decade, and developed a close friendship with Gregory Vlastos. In 1953 he was elected to a tutorial fellowship and university lecturership at Brasenose College, Oxford, and in August of the same year married Margaret Walker Kerr. His undergraduate pupils at Brasenose included David Wiggins and Michael Woods. Woods was later elected to a fellowship at Brasenose: and if Oxford was the place to be for Ancient Philosophy in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, the team of Ackrill and Woods made Brasenose the place to be in Oxford. In 1966 Ackrill became the first holder of Oxford's Professorship of the History of Philosophy. Although Oxford professorships are each associated with a particular college (in this case Keble), Ackrill's great attachment to Brasenose led him to take advantage of a curious Oxford rule which allowed the first holder of a chair, if already associated with an Oxford college, to remain there — somewhat disconcerting Austin Farrer, the Warden of Keble, in the process. Ackrill served as vice-principal of Brasenose, 1978-80, was made a Fellow of the British Academy in 1981, and continued as Professor of the History of Philosophy until his retirement in 1989. He was made an honorary Fellow of St John's in 1996. He oversaw a generation of graduate students, in his regular graduate classes on Plato and Aristotle (and occasional ones on Plotinus), as a doctoral supervisor, and as adviser to a stream of visiting students from all over the world. A review of his first book, on Aristotle's Categories and De Interpretatione, captured Ackrill's particular style as an Ancient philosopher: “Mr Ackrill never raises his voice.” Ackrill disliked any form of showiness, and had a passion not only for precision in thought and speech but also for clarity and simplicity of expression. He had a deep distrust of any attempt to be definitive: it was highly characteristic of him to describe his own work as merely pointing out or clarifying problems; and some of his work is indeed principally of this character, such as his enormously influential 1973 paper Aristotle's Definitions of Psuche, and his excellent introduction to Aristotle, Aristotle the Philosopher (1981). Other papers, such as his ground-breaking articles on Plato's Sophist and his renowned British Academy lecture on Aristotelian eudaimonia, display a less Socratic style; but even here Ackrill always steered clear of grand systems and the sweeping statement, preferring to work on texts and problems in all their particularity, and possessing an extraordinary ability to go to the heart of things with great concision and the minimum of fuss. He was the ideal person to take over the Clarendon Aristotle Series from its founder, J.L. Austin, on the latter's death in 1960. The aim of the series, which Ackrill was to edit for more than 40 years, was to present accurate translations of Aristotelian texts, and philosophical commentaries designed to help readers to think about these texts for themselves. The second volume to appear, in 1963, was Ackrill's own on the Categories and De Interpretatione, two early works concerned with foundational issues in Aristotle's philosophy of language and metaphysics. Ackrill's translation set a standard for faithfulness and elegance which few others have equalled; his illuminating and incisive commentary has been among the main stimuli for work in these areas over the last 40 years. The book is one of the most cited works on Ancient Philosophy in the English-speaking world. He retired as editor in 2001, having overseen the writing of 19 other volumes, and having thus been the prime mover in the creation of an unrivalled resource for professionals as well as graduates. In his personal life Ackrill displayed the same qualities found in his academic work. What colleagues found most striking about him was his modesty, his courtesy, kindness and unfailing good humour, a Socratic seriousness coupled with a quiet wit, and his love for his family: however much philosophy was discussed, the conversation always turned at some stage to Margaret and their children. It was entirely characteristic of Ackrill's approach to ancient philosophy that he began the last paragraph of the final essay in the second edition of Essays on Plato and Aristotle (2001) with “I end on an interrogative note.” What Ackrill did for a whole generation of ancient philosophers, as his writings continue to do for his readers today, was to teach them — and inspire them — to be interrogative; to ask searching questions of difficult texts. He is survived by his wife, Margaret, and their four children. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article3074592.ece
Professor John Ackrill: Oxford Professor of the History of Philosophy who was a leader in the study of Plato and AristotlePublished: 18 December 2007John Lloyd Ackrill, philosopher and classical scholar: born Reading, Berkshire 30 December 1921; Assistant Lecturer in Logic, Glasgow University 1948-49; University Lecturer in Ancient Philosophy, Oxford University 1951-52, Professor of the History of Philosophy 1966-89 (Emeritus); Fellow, Brasenose College, Oxford 1953-89 (Emeritus), Tutorial Fellow 1953-66; FBA 1981; married 1953 Margaret Kerr (one son, three daughters); died Oxford 30 November 2007. John Ackrill was a leader in the philosophical and scholarly study of Plato and Aristotle. He played a decisive role in forming the dominant philosophical approach to ancient philosophy in the late 20th century. Born in Reading in 1921, and educated at Reading School (which claims to be the 10th oldest school in England), Ackrill entered St John's College, Oxford, as a scholar in Classics in 1940. The following year he left for war service in the Royal Berkshire Regiment and General Staff, and reached the rank of captain. He returned to Oxford in 1945 to read Literae Humaniores (Classics, philosophy, and ancient history). On graduation, in 1948 Ackrill went directly to a teaching position, as assistant lecturer in Logic at Glasgow. He was appointed university lecturer at Oxford in Ancient Philosophy in 1949, but before he took up the post he was given two years of study leave, which he spent in Switzerland and in Princeton (which he visited on three other occasions in the 1950s and 1960s). After two years as university lecturer, he became a tutorial fellow of Brasenose College in 1953. From 1959, the other Brasenose philosophy tutor was Michael Woods, a former pupil of Ackrill's, a collaborator in the study of ancient philosophy, and a close friend until his death in 1993. In 1966, the university created a statutory chair in the History of Philosophy, and Ackrill was elected the first holder. He held it, while remaining a fellow of Brasenose, until his retirement in 1989. As professor he turned from teaching undergraduates to the supervision of graduate students, the provision of graduate classes, and the encouragement of research in ancient philosophy. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1981, and an Honorary Fellow of St John's in 1996. In the late 1940s and 1950s, philosophy in Oxford was a lively, experimental, and highly social activity, under the influence – sometimes complementary and sometimes contrasting – of Gottlob Frege, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Gilbert Ryle and J.L. Austin. Ackrill's work combines the older tradition of Oxford philosophical scholarship (represented by Sir David Ross) with his interest in contemporary philosophy. His papers from the 1950s and 1960s use arguments from (inter alios) Peter Strawson, Frege and Ryle, to raise questions about Plato and Aristotle. Ackrill's role as a college tutor influenced his aims as a teacher and writer. As a tutor, he was, as one distinguished former pupil recalls, "exact but good-humoured". He did not try to persuade a pupil of a particular doctrine, but tried to encourage critical thought through objections and replies. He carried the same Socratic approach into his supervision of graduate students. He would not try to communicate his own position to the student, but would criticise the student's view in ways that would clarify, improve and complicate the position being criticised. The results of his efforts are evident in much of the best work on Greek philosophy in the past 40 years, both by his pupils and by those he influenced less directly. The character, though not the extent, of his influence may be gathered from the Festschrift produced by some of his former pupils, colleagues, and friends, published in Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy in 1986 (edited by Michael Woods). His Socratic and tutorial attitude appears in his published papers (collected in Essays on Plato and Aristotle, 1997). Often he announces that he aims to provoke discussion, or to raise a problem, not to expound a philosophical system. As he puts it, "it seems to me both enjoyable and rewarding to engage in philosophical argument with Aristotle"; this engagement includes criticism of Aristotle's (or Plato's) errors. His best papers are terse, elegant, bold and challenging. His early short paper "Plato and the copula" argues that Plato sees that central elements of his metaphysical position, and in particular of his Theory of Forms, need to be rethought. In "Aristotle's Definitions of Psuchê", Ackrill argues that Aristotle's familiar doctrines about form, matter and substance rest on conflicting assumptions, and that these conflicting assumptions threaten the coherence of his whole account of soul and body. His best-known paper – often cited, often translated, and continually discussed since its appearance as a British Academy Lecture in 1974 – is "Aristotle on Eudaimonia", which not only sets out a problem, but also offers a persuasive answer to it He argues that Aristotle conceives the ultimate human good (eudaimonia, often rendered "happiness"), not as some goal that is wholly external to all the activities that we might regard as worthwhile for themselves, to which everything else is purely instrumental, but as a compound of states and activities that are valued for themselves. Ackrill formulates this view with unrivalled clarity, and defends it by close attention to particular passages and difficulties. His collected papers do not include any of his book reviews or critical notices (which are listed in his Festschrift). These are essential reading for anyone who wants to grasp the range and depth of his interests and his knowledge. His learned, probing, and suggestive reviews and discussions show his expertise and scholarship in areas in which he published nothing more. In addition to his papers, he published an admirably clear and lively introduction to Aristotle, Aristotle the Philosopher (1981), selections from Aristotle's Ethics with an introduction and brief notes (1973), and an annotated translation of Aristotle's Categories and De Intepretatione (1963). This last work demonstrates Ackrill's remarkable skill as a philosophical translator. Though his notes are said to be "offered only as an aid to beginners", they have provoked many pages of discussion by advanced students as well. This volume appeared in the Clarendon Aristotle Series, of which Ackrill had become the general editor after the death of J.L. Austin in 1960. The volumes in this series, each of which includes lucid and helpful notes, have made Aristotle more accessible to students at all levels. The individual translators must take much of the credit; the prefaces to their volumes imply that much of the credit must also go to Ackrill, and latterly to his successor, Lindsay Judson. Many Oxford undergraduates and graduates appreciated Ackrill's lectures and classes; and he supervised many graduate students in Greek philosophy who are now established members of the profession. These are not the only people who have reason to be grateful for his constructive criticism and guidance. Oxford attracts academic visitors from all over the world; and many scholars from outside Oxford, with no formal claim on his time or attention, will recall with gratitude Ackrill's encouragement and advice throughout their careers. The austere clarity of his writing gives a sense of one side of his personality; but it does not convey the dry and pungent wit that enlivened his conversation, or the warmth and generosity of his friendship. Terence Irwin http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article3260741.ece |
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