John Rawls
John Rawls, influential political philosopher, dead at 81:
Author of "A Theory of Justice" was James Bryant Conant University Professor
Emeritus
By Ken Gewertz
Gazette Staff
Updated 4 p.m. 11/26/02
John Rawls, the James Bryant Conant University Professor Emeritus, whose 1971
book, "A Theory of Justice" argued persuasively for a society based on equality
and individual rights, died Sunday (Nov. 24) at the age of 81.
Rawls is considered by many to be the most important political philosopher of
the 20th century and a powerful advocate of the liberal perspective. His work
continues to be a major influence in the fields of ethics, law, political
science, and economics, and has been translated into 27 languages.
Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers said, "I am deeply saddened by
the death of John Rawls. He combined profound wisdom with equally profound
humanity. Few if any modern philosophers have had as decisive an impact on how
we think about justice. Scholars in many different fields will continue to
learn from him for generations to come."
William Kirby, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, said, "John Rawls'
consideration of questions of social justice has marked him as one of the
greatest political theorists of our time. His analyses of the conditions,
present and wished for, under which we pursue the great questions of right
living in a pluralistic society reveal his probity and his searching quality of
mind. We are very sad to know of his passing. This is a grave loss for Harvard,
and for philosophy."
Philosophy Department Chairman Thomas Scanlon, the Alford Professor of Natural
Religion, Moral Philosophy, and Civil Policy, said that "John Rawls was widely
recognized as the greatest political philosopher of the 20th century. His work
revived and reshaped the entire field, and its profound influence on the way
justice is understood and argued about will last long into the future. He was
also a remarkable teacher, who inspired countless students, and an unfailingly
generous and devoted colleague. We will miss him greatly and are all deeply
grateful to have had the privilege of being around when he was here."
Stanley Hoffmann, the Paul and Catherine Buttenwieser University Professor,
said of Rawls: "This gentle, modest and thoughtful man has revived the
philosophy of liberalism that had been for so long mired in its glorious past
and ridiculed by its enemies. His colossal attempt to adapt it to the
circumstances of the 20th century, to the age of democracy, but also
totalitarianism, world wars and mass poverty, his emphasis both on diversity
and on consensus, his scrutiny of democratic citizenship and of the
requirements of justice, his influence on disciples he treated as his equals,
will continue to inspire us and to deserve our gratitude. He was a great
thinker and a good man, and many of us feel orphaned."
Charles Fried, the Beneficial Professor of Law at Harvard, said of Rawls, "He
was the dominant figure in political and moral philosophy in the second half
of the 20th century. He developed an approach to the questions of moral and
political philosophy which was substantive and analytic at the same time,
proposing concrete answers to many questions."
Dennis Thompson, the Alfred North Whitehead Professor of Political Philosophy
and director of the University Center for Ethics and the Professions, stated
that in his view Rawls "will be in the canon for centuries, along with Hobbes,
Locke, Rousseau, Kant, Mill, etc." Rawls was a senior fellow in the Center for
Ethics and the Professions from its beginning in 1986 and was personally
engaged in the work of the center until his illness made active participation
impossible.
In "A Theory of Justice," Rawls sets forth the proposition that "Each person
possesses an inviolability founded on justice that even the welfare of society
as a whole cannot override. Therefore, in a just society the rights secured by
justice are not subject to political bargaining or to the calculus of social
interests."
Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Rawls attended the Kent School in Kent, Conn., and
earned a B.A. degree from Princeton in 1943. From 1943 to 1945 he served in New
Guinea, the Philippines, and Japan as an enlisted man in the U.S. infantry,
later describing his military career as "singularly undistinguished." He
returned to Princeton in 1946 to take up graduate studies, receiving his Ph.D.
in philosophy in 1950.
Before joining the Harvard Philosophy Department in 1962, he was an instructor
at Princeton (1950-52), assistant and associate professor of philosophy at
Cornell (1953-59), and professor of philosophy at M.I.T. (1960-62). He was
appointed the Conant University Professor at Harvard in 1979.
University professors hold Harvard’s highest professorial posts. These special
endowed positions were established in 1935 by the President and Fellows of
Harvard College for "individuals of distinction ... working on the frontiers of
knowledge, and in such a way as to cross the conventional boundaries of the
specialties."
In addition to "A Theory of Justice," nominated for a National Book Award, his
publications include "Political Liberalism" (1993), "The Law of Peoples" (1999)
, "Collected Papers" (1999), "Lectures on the History of Moral Philosophy"
(2000), and "Justice as Fairness: A Restatement" (2001).
He was a member of the American Philosophical Association (president, 1974),
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association of
Political and Legal Philosophy (president, 1970-72), the American Philosophical
Society, the British Academy, and the Norwegian Academy of Sciences. In 1999,
he received the National Humanities Medal from the National Endowment for the
Humanities.
Rawls died of heart failure at his home in Lexington, Mass. He had suffered a
series of debilitating strokes that eventually left him unable to work. He
leaves his wife, Margaret Warfield Fox Rawls, four children — Anne Warfield,
Robert Lee, Alexander Emory, and Elizabeth Fox — and four grandchildren.
A memorial service is scheduled for Dec. 3 at 9:30 a.m. at the First Parish
Unitarian Universalist Church in Lexington.
--
哼哼~~我就是要轉陰溝理去的來
--
我 , 漢泥拔 , 羅馬的夢魘............
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.csie.ntu.edu.tw)
◆ From: 140.112.214.117
推
推 61.224.29.190 11/27, , 1F
推 61.224.29.190 11/27, 1F
推
推 61.224.29.190 11/27, , 2F
推 61.224.29.190 11/27, 2F
推
推 61.224.29.190 11/27, , 3F
推 61.224.29.190 11/27, 3F
推
推140.112.214.117 11/27, , 4F
推140.112.214.117 11/27, 4F
推
推 61.216.24.204 11/27, , 5F
推 61.216.24.204 11/27, 5F
推
推 61.216.30.99 11/28, , 6F
推 61.216.30.99 11/28, 6F
推
推 61.216.239.212 11/28, , 7F
推 61.216.239.212 11/28, 7F
推
推 61.224.32.83 11/29, , 8F
推 61.224.32.83 11/29, 8F
推
推 61.224.28.158 11/29, , 9F
推 61.224.28.158 11/29, 9F
推
推140.112.214.117 11/29, , 10F
推140.112.214.117 11/29, 10F