James Frederick Ferrier's Socratic Ethics
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Published:2019-09
Issue:3
Volume:17
Page:211-226
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ISSN:1479-6651
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Container-title:Journal of Scottish Philosophy
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Scottish Philosophy
Affiliation:
1. State University of New York, Stony Brook
Abstract
James Frederick Ferrier is probably best known for the idealism he presents in An Introduction to the Philosophy of Consciousness and Institutes of Metaphysic, in which Ferrier critiques and offers an alternative to Common Sense Realism – the dominant school of thought in Scotland in the 18th and early 19th centuries – spearheaded by Thomas Reid and his followers. What has received significantly less attention in the literature, however, is Ferrier's 1866 Lectures on Greek Philosophy, which serves as an important point of connection between the moral philosophy that Ferrier develops in the Introduction and Institutes and what Ferrier takes to be the ethics that Socrates taught and according to which he lived. In this paper, I examine Plato's early dialogues in order to demonstrate that Ferrier's ethics should be understood as a descendent of Socratic ethics insofar as both Ferrier and Socrates endorse the view that individual freedom is only possible through a life of thought that transcends the particularities of sensation.
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Subject
Philosophy,History,Cultural Studies