John Anderson (philosopher)

John Anderson (philosopher)

Infobox_Philosopher
region = Western Philosophy
era = 20th-century philosophy
color = #B0C4DE

name = John Anderson
birth = birth date|1893|11|01
death = death date and age|1962|07|06|1893|11|01
school_tradition = Australian Realism
main_interests = Political philosophy, Ethics
influences = Heraclitus
influenced = John Passmore, David Armstrong, David Stove, J. L. Mackie, Eugene Kamenka
notable_ideas =

John Anderson (November 1, 1893 – July 6, 1962) was a Scottish-born Australian philosopher who occupied the post of Challis Professor of Philosophy at Sydney University in the years 1927-1958. He founded the empirical brand of philosophy known as 'Sydney realism'. His promotion of 'free thought' in all subjects, including politics and morality, was controversial and brought him into constant conflict with the august senate of the university. However, he is credited with educating a generation of influential 'Andersonian' thinkers and activists--some of whom helped to place Sydney in the forefront of the worldwide 'sexual revolution' of the 1950s and 1960s. To Anderson, an acceptable philosophy must have significant 'sweep' and be capable of challenging and moulding ideas in every aspect of intellect and society.

Early life

Anderson was born in Stonehouse, Lanarkshire, Scotland and educated at Hamilton Academy and the University of GlasgowOnline Dictionary of Australian Biography [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070060b.htm] ] .

Having graduated MA in 1917, he lectured at the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire (Cardiff) (1917-19), the University of Glasgow (1919-20) and at the University of Edinburgh (1920-26).

ocial theory

After arriving in Sydney in 1927 he associated with the Communist Party of Australia and contributed to their journals, sometimes under a nom-de-plume [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070060b.htm ] but, by about 1932 he began to realise, perhaps before most of his contemporaries, that communism under Stalin in the Soviet Union was a dictatorship with no room for workers' control or participation. He then became aligned with the Trotskyist movement for a period of time.

Anderson later abandoned authoritarian forms of socialism and became what would today be called a libertarian and Pluralism (political philosophy)
pluralist
--an opponent of all forms of authoritarianism. Sometimes he described himself as an anarchist but, after the 1930s, he gave up his earlier political utopianism.

Advocacy of academic freedom

As Sydney University's Challis Professor of Philosophy, Anderson was a formidable champion of the principle of academic freedom from authoritarian intervention. For example, he fought a successful battle to end the role of the British Medical Association in setting course standards and student quotas in the medical school. He also railed against the presence on campus of a military unit--the Sydney University Regiment--and lived to see the day in 1960 when the regiment's campus HQ was destroyed by fire. (The regiment was subsequently rehoused at a new facility on university-owned land at Darlington.) [ [http://www.defence.gov.au/army/SUR/History.htm "History of Sydney University Regiment"] ] .

Anderson was censured by the Sydney University Senate in 1931 after criticising the role of war memorials in sanctifying war. In 1943 he was censured by the Parliament of New South Wales after arguing that religion has no place in schools. He founded the Sydney University Freethought Society which ran from 1931 to 1951. He was president of the society throughout that period.

It is legendary that the university's Senate, accepting that it could not realise its desire to sack the controversial Challis Professor, sought to reduce Anderson's stature and influence by creating a new chair of "Moral and Political Philosophy" to which Alan K. Stout was appointed. This tactic misfired when Stout immediately recognised Anderson's genius, became one of his steadiest admirers and declined to undercut his prestige in any way. The result was that Sydney gained a second prestigious and personable philosopher.

Thought and influence

"He is, arguably, the most important philosopher who has worked in Australia. Certainly he was the most important in both the breadth and depth of influence. Among the philosophers who got their original intellectual formation from Anderson are John Passmore, John Mackie, A.J. (‘Jim’) Baker, David Stove and myself. There are lots more. But for every student who became a philosopher there were far, far, more in the law, in medicine, in journalism, in other academic disciplines, that were profoundly influenced by him. I am inclined to think that, especially in the thirties and forties of the last century, Anderson was the person who set the agenda, and set the tone, for intellectual discussion in Sydney". [Armstrong D Address on 9 July 2005 [http://www.usyd.edu.au/news/84.html?newsstoryid=597 "John Anderson Remembered" ] ] - David Armstrong (2005)

As a committed empiricist, Anderson argued that there is only one realm of "being" and it can be best understood through science and naturalistic philosophy. He asserted that there is no supernatural god and that there are no non-natural realms along the lines of Platonic ideals. He rejected all notions that knowledge could be obtained by means other than descriptions of facts and any belief that revelation or mysticism could be sources for obtaining truth. He was arguing that traditional christian concepts of good and evil were only meant for slaves and that, in actuality, the idea of morality was empty. For Anderson, the term "good" was valid when applied objectively to human activities which were free, critical and creative but the more common subjective applications were to be avoided or exposed as deceptive. not surprisingly, Anderson's influence was both extensive and controversial as he constantly examined and fearlessly criticized hallowed beliefs and institutions.

Freethought and the Sydney Libertarians

Anderson's insistence on unceasing inquiry and criticism became central to the intellectual principles of the university's Libertarian Society which supplanted the Freethought Society in the early 1950s and provided a philosophic platform for the much broader subculture known as "the Push" throughout the 1960s. He was a defender of free speech and was critical of the Australian government's bans on certain political publications (1928). He advocated religious and sexual freedoms and free discussion of issues in an era when mention of taboo subjects commonly resulted in angry public condemnation by prominent moralists.

In the latter years of his career, the 1950s, Anderson exhibited more conservative views, although A.J. Baker generously interprets his 1950s stage not so much as "a definite change in his overall thinking than ... an alteration of emphasis and interest." [ A.J. Baker, "Anderson's Social Philosophy: The Social Thought & Political Life of Professor John Anderson", Sydney : Angus & Robertson, 1979, p. 130] To many, though, it seemed that Anderson was departing from his pluralism. During the 1949 coal miners' strike, for instance, he supported the government's action in using troops as strikebreakers. [ ibid.] At a Freethought Society meeting in August 1950 he refused to oppose conscription for the war in Korea. [ Anne Coombs, "Sex and Anarchy: The Life and Death of the Sydney Push", Ringwood, Vic.: Viking, 1996, p. 12] In 1951 he refused to allow students to use the Freethought Society to canvass the 'No' case for Menzies' attempt to ban the Communist Party in the referendum of that year. [ ibid.] This was the last straw for many Freethinkers; Anderson's apparent authoritarianism caused most to abandon the Freethought Society and to establish the Libertarian Society. The Freethought Society held its last meeting in 1951, [ Baker, "op. cit.", p. 131] while the Libertarian Society functioned from 1952 to 1969. [ Baker, "op. cit.", p. 144]

Anderson broke off contact with the former disciples who formed the Libertarian Society and never associated with "Push" people who routinely sang his praises along with the bawdy songs he had imported to his new country [The outrageous "Ballad of Professor John Glaister" is one example, some of the words of which have been published in "Snatches & Lays" (Sun Books, Melbourne, 1975)] . However, even after retirement in 1958 and to the brink of his death in 1962, he was seen daily in his study, continuing his work and reviewing earlier work. Among his last publications were "Classicism" (1960), "Empiricism and Logic" (1962) and "Relational Arguments" (1962) [ Anderson, J. "Studies in Empirical Philosophy", Sydney University Press 2004]

Enduring legacy

At a time when Australia had few genuinely first-rate intellectuals, Anderson's influence in Sydney intellectual life was enormous. The failure of the Communist Party to build a significant influence at Sydney University during the 1930s and 1940s, compared with the Party's greater success at Melbourne University, is often attributed to the influence of "Andersonian individualism" among Sydney students. Anderson's influence spread through his personal impact on several generations of students, the "Andersonians". They included the philosophers John Passmore, David Armstrong, Jim Baker, David Stove, J. L. Mackie and Eugene Kamenka, the World War II organiser Alf Conlon, many members of the Sydney Push and jurist John Kerr, later to be Australia's best-remembered Governor-General.

academia
teachers=Samuel Alexander
students=David Armstrong Jim Baker
Futa Helu Eugene Kamenka J. L. Mackie John Passmore David Stove John Kerr

References

Further reading

* J. Anderson (Introduction by D. Armstrong) "Space, Time and the Categories: Lectures on Metaphysics 1949-50" (Sydney University Press, 2007) [http://purl.library.usyd.edu.au/sup/9781920898625] (ISBN 9781920898625) [http://purl.library.usyd.edu.au/sup/9781920898625 ]
* J. Anderson, Regular contributions to "The Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy"
* J. Anderson, "Studies in Empirical Philosophy" (Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1962) [http://fmx01.ucc.usyd.edu.au/jspcart/jsp/cart/Product.jsp?nID=92&nCategoryID=18] (ISBN 1920898174)
* Janet Anderson, Graham Cullum, Kimon Lycos (eds.), "Art and Reality: John Anderson on Literature and Aesthetics" (Sydney: Hale and Iremonger, 1982)
* A.J. Baker, "Anderson's Social Philosophy: The Social Thought and Political Life of Professor John Anderson" (Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1979)
* A.J. Baker, "Australian Realism: The Systematic Philosophy of John Anderson" (Cambridge University Press, 1986)
* A. Barcan, "Radical Students: The Old Left at Sydney University" (Carlton South, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 2002) [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8191(198707)62%3A241%3C404%3AARTSPO%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T review]
* J. Franklin, "Corrupting the Youth: A History of Philosophy in Australia" (Macleay Press, 2003), chs 1-2
* B. Kennedy, "A Passion to Oppose: John Anderson, Philosopher" (Carlton South, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1995)
* Mark Weblin (ed.), "A Perilous and Fighting Life: From Communist to Conservative: The Political Writings of Professor John Anderson" (North Melbourne: Pluto Press, 2003)

External links

* [http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/anderson/ John Anderson Archive, University of Sydney]
* [http://fmx01.ucc.usyd.edu.au/jspcart/jsp/cart/Product.jsp?nID=92&nCategoryID=18 John Anderson "Studies in Empirical Philosophy"] Sydney University Press, 1962
*" [http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/oztexts/anderson.html Professor John Anderson 1893-1962, Lecture Notes and Other Writings] " University of Sydney, Australian Studies Resources
* [http://www.abc.net.au/rn/philosopherszone/stories/2007/2023604.htm#transcript ABC "Philosopher's Zone" transcript]
* [http://www.clivejames.com/articles/clive/anderson Clive James on John Anderson ("The Monthly", July 2005)]
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070060b.htm Extensive biography at the Australian Dictionary of Biography]


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