Alan R. White

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Alan R. White
File:Alan R. White, philosopher (1922 – 1992).jpg
Born (1922-10-09)9 October 1922
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
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Sherwood, Nottingham, UK
Education B.A., Trinity College, Dublin, (1945); PhD,. University of London, (1958)
Occupation Philosopher
Spouse(s) Eileen Anne Jarvis (1948–1977),[1] Enid Elizabeth Alderson (1979–1992)

Alan Richard White (9 October 1922 – 23 February 1992) was an analytic philosopher who worked mainly in epistemology, the philosophy of mind, and, latterly, legal philosophy. Peter Hacker notes that he was "the most skillful developer of Rylean ... ideas in philosophical psychology" and that "if anyone surpassed Austin in subtlety and refinement in the discrimination of grammatical differences, it was White."[2] Richard Swinburne remarks that "during the heyday of 'ordinary language philosophy' no tongue practised it better."[3]

Biography

Alan R. White (as he was usually cited)[4] was born in Toronto on 9 October 1922, the elder of two sons born to Irish emigrants George Albert White (1888–1940), an estate agent from Strabane, and Jean Gabriel (Kingston) White (1888–1957).[5] Following their parents' separation in the early 1930s, both brothers moved with their Catholic mother when she returned to her hometown of Cork (where she would work in the drapery trade). There they would be educated in the Protestant faith of their father as boarders at Middleton College until the sixth form. White then transferred to (the Catholic) Presentation College, Cork, to prepare for entrance to Trinity College, Dublin.[5] Despite his religious schooling, within only a few years White would become, as academic colleague Paul Gilbert notes, "a keen atheist."[5]

White was admitted to Trinity in 1941 with a junior exhibition and a sizarship in classics.[5] During his time there he served as President of the University Philosophical Society.[6][7] He graduated in 1945 with firsts in both classics and 'mental and moral science' (philosophy) .[5] He is said. reports David J. Matheson, to have scored over 100 per cent in some of his exams by taking them in Irish, for which extra credit was given.[6][8] Other achievements during his time as an undergraduate included prizes for Hegelian philosophy and flyweight.boxing.[5] That he was also "pugnacious" outside the ring is attested to by Trinity philosopher A. A. Luce who records that the two had "many a battle" when White was a student in his class.[9]

Also through this time, which coincided with "The Emergency" of World War II, White served with the Local Defence Force in the 42nd Dublin Rifle Battalion.[10][11] After graduation he remained at Trinity for a year to pursue further studies in classics and serve as a deputy lecturer in logic.[11]

In 1946 White was appointed as an assistant lecturer in the department of philosophy and psychology at the (then) University College of Hull,[12] the departmental staff initially consisting solely of himself and Professor T. E. Jessop.[5] White obtained this position on the recommendation of Luce[8][13] who had contributed the "Inventory of the Manuscript Remains" to Jessop's A Bibliography of George Berkeley (1934).[14]

Prior to his arrival, Jessop had performed all the teaching duties for both philosophy and psychology.[8] And though Hull's first dedicated psychology lecturer, George Westby, was appointed around the same time as White,[15] the latter would himself also teach psychology as well as philosophy students long after the college acquired university status in 1954 and two separate departments were formed.[5] Ullin Place records that, with the "connivance" of White, Westby. a fellow Rylean, succeeded in making Hull's psychology department "a center for a distinctive amalgam of ordinary language philosophy and behavioral psychology" in its early years.[16] And Westby himself records White's "invaluable co-operation" in initiating and running the three-year "Philosophical Problems of the Sciences" course. The same having been intended to ensure psychology students appreciated "it is impossible to have a purely technical scientific language," [17] a thorough examination of 'Mental' concepts being, as White notes, a necessary preparation "even for those whose chief interest is in the science of psychology."[18]

Within the philosophy department, White progressed to the positions of Lecturer and then Senior Lecturer, succeeding Jessop to become the second Ferens Professor of Philosophy in 1961 (a post he retained until his early retirement in 1985).[11][5] At Hull he would also serve as dean of arts (1969–71) and as pro-vice-chancellor (1976–79).[5]

In 1958 White completed his PhD at the University of London under the supervision of A.J. Ayer, with a thesis on "The Method of Analysis In the Philosophy of G. E. Moore."[11][19][20] That same year would see the publication of the fruits of this research in his first book G.E. Moore: a Critical Exposition.[21][22]

White was a Visiting Professor at numerous American universities including the University of Maryland (1967–68, 1980), Temple University (1974), Simon Fraser University (1983), the University of Delaware (1986) and Bowling Green State University (1988).[11] He also became known to the first generation of 'third year' students of philosophy at the Open University, participating in a BBC televised discussion on perception[23] that was annually repeated as part of the 'A303, Problems of philosophy' correspondence course which ran from 1973 until 1981.[24][25]

He also served as Secretary, and then president, of the Mind Association and as President of the Aristotelian Society.[6][26]

White retired to Nottingham, and was as appointed Special Professor of Philosophy at the university there in 1986.[26]

In the last decade of his life, as Hacker notes, White worked on jurisprudential problems pertaining to action, intention, voluntariness, negligence and recklessness.[2]

He died at his home in Sherwood, Nottingham on 23 February 1992.[5]

His papers, previously held in the Brynmor Jones Library, are now housed at the Hull History Centre.[26]

A volume of White's selected papers, as edited by Constantine Sandis (who credits White's Grounds of Liability as "a huge influence")[27] with John Preston and David Dolby is forthcoming.[28][29]

Works

Authored books/monographs

Edited books

Papers/book chapters

A listing of White's publications that includes Reviews can be found at PhilPapers.[107]

References

  1. Hull Daily Mail, Friday 13 August 1948, p.2, "MARRIAGES WHITE —JARVIS.—At. All Saints Church. Hessle, on Aug. 12th, 1948, Alan R. White, B.A., University Col, Hull, eldest son of Mrs and the late Mr G. A. White, of Cork, Eire, to Eileen, only daughter of Mr and Mrs A. E. Jarvls, Oaklands-drive Hessle."
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  4. though sometimes also cited as "A. R. White"
  5. 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) Also available for loan/preview via the Internet Archive in ODNB Vol.58 (2004) pp.539-540 (Free registration required for volume loan.)
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Matheson, David J., "White, Alan Richard (1922—92)".(2005), in The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy (2006) ISBN 9780199754694,
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  10. "Alan R(ichard) White." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2003
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  12. an academic institution that presented its undergraduates for external degrees at the University of London
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  15. Howarth, Ian (1984). "Obituary - George Westby". Bulletin of the British Psychological Society. 37: 339.
  16. Place, U. T. (1992). "Behaviorism and behavior analysis in Britain: An historical overview." The ABA Newsletter, 15, 5–7.
  17. Westby, George (1966). "Psychology today: problems and directions," Bulletin of the British Psychological Society. 19 (65): 1–19. p.10
  18. WHITE, A. R. (1961): "Philosophy, Psychology and Sociology," . Mimeographed . Dept. of Philosophy, University of Hull. quoted in: Westby, George (1966). "Psychology today: problems and directions," Bulletin of the British Psychological Society. 19 (65): 1–19. p.10
  19. Hull History Centre: Papers of Professor Alan Richard White UDAW Papers of Professor Alan Richard White c.1945-1992
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  23. [video] "Perception - Open University Digital Archive". www.open.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-06-01
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  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 Description of 'Papers of Professor Alan Richard White, c.1945-1992. Hull University Archives, Hull History Centre. GB 50 U DAW' on the Archives Hub website, [https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/data/gb50-udaw], (date accessed :30/03/2021)
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  32. Malcolm, Norman, "Critical Notice," (Mind, New Series, Vol. 69, No. 273, Jan 1960, pp. 92-98), "Except for parts of the chapters on philosophical analysis White's book is regrettably dull. The reports and classifications of Moore's opinions and arguments are tedious. In the final chapter, the comparison of Moore to Reid and Berkeley is too brief to be of any value and the second half, on Moore's contemporaries, is a pot-pourri of rapid and superficial remarks about a host of philosophers. It is difficult to imagine what the author thought the good of it might have been. Lacking depth, accuracy and fresh insight, this work will hardly remind the reader of the exciting qualities of Moore's writings." (p.98)
  33. Urmson, J. O. (1961). "Book Reviews". The Philosophical Quarterly. 11 (43): 190–191. doi:10.2307/2960133. ISSN 0031-8094.
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  36. Revised and reprinted in White (1967)
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  41. White's treatment of 'recklessness' therein is a 'point of departure' in: Winslade, William J. "Recklessness." Analysis, vol. 30, no. 4, 1970, pp. 135–140.
  42. Palmer, Anthony (1968). "The Philosophy of Mind. By Alan R. White. (Random House Studies in Philosophy, 1967. Pp. 178. Price 16s.)". Philosophy. 43 (164): p. 172 doi:10.1017/S0031819100009098. ISSN 1469-817X.Full Preview
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  72. Duff, R. A., (1986) "Alan R. White, Grounds of Liability: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law" [Review], Philosophy in Review 6 (6):316-318 (1986)
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  74. Thomas, Janice (1989) 'Alan R. White, "Methods of Metaphysics."' Philosophy in Review Vol 9 No 2 (1989): February
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  82. 82.00 82.01 82.02 82.03 82.04 82.05 82.06 82.07 82.08 82.09 82.10 82.11 82.12 82.13 82.14 *free to read online at JSTOR with registration
  83. being a brief note of reply to: Hartnack, Justus. "Remarks about Experience." Analysis, vol. 13, no. 5, 1953, pp. 117–120.
  84. being a rejoinder to: Evans, J. L. "On Meaning and Verification." Mind, vol. 62, no. 245, 1953, pp. 1–19.
  85. being a response to: Hampshire, Stuart. "Dispositions." Analysis, vol. 14, no. 1, 1953, pp. 5–11.
  86. being a brief reply to: Ritchie, A. D., "The ‘Gambler's Fallacy,'" Analysis, Volume 15, Issue 2, December 1954, Pages 47–48
  87. a response to: Ryle, Gilbert. "Ordinary Language." The Philosophical Review, vol. 62, no. 2, 1953, pp. 167–186.
  88. a response to: Woozley, A. D. "Knowing and Not Knowing." Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, vol. 53, 1952, pp. 151–172 also reprinted in Knowledge and Belief.
  89. responded to in: Mayo, Bernard. "Truth as Appraisal." Mind, vol. 68, no. 269, 1959, pp. 80–86, and Khatchadourian, Haig. "Truth as Appraisal." Mind, vol. 71, no. 283, 1962, pp. 387–391.
  90. a reply to: Watling, John. "The Problem of Contrary-to-Fact Conditionals." Analysis, vol. 17, no. 4, 1957, pp. 73–80, both being briefly discussed in 'Reviewed Works', Freudenthal, Hans. The Journal of Symbolic Logic, vol. 33, no. 2, 1968, p. 311.
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  92. a reply to Searle, J, (1966) "Assertions and Aberrations" in British Analytical Philosophy. Bernard Williams and Alan Montefiore.(eds.), also reprinted in Fann (1969) (the latter collection also being a title White reviewed for The Philosophical Quarterly)
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  95. see Grounds of Liability "Future Truths"
  96. *see "Intention" in Grounds of Liability p.72-91 (and, also, "Austin as philosophical analyst" p.390-394
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  98. see "The nature of the Actus Reus" in Grounds of Liability for discussion of related matters
  99. "unfortunately the notion of a proposition was one of Russell's more kaleidoscopic notions, as Alan R. White has shown." Dejnozka, J. "The ontological foundation of Russell's theory of modality". Erkenntnis 32, 383–418 (1990).
  100. rejoinder: Newton, Natika. "Visualizing Is Imagining Seeing: A Reply to White." Analysis, vol. 49, no. 2, 1989, pp. 77–81,
  101. a reply to: Stoljar, Samuel. "White on Rights and Claims." Law and Philosophy, vol. 4, no. 1, 1985, pp. 101–114.(the same being a rejoinder to White's "Rights and Claims")
  102. rejoinder: Newton, Natika. "Visualizing Is Imagining Seeing: A Reply to White." vol. 49, no. 2, 1989, pp. 77–81, replied to in White's "Imaginary Imagining"
  103. a response to Newton, Natika. "Visualizing Is Imagining Seeing: A Reply to White." Analysis, vol. 49, no. 2, 1989, pp. 77–81 (the same being a criticism of White's "Visualising and Imagining Seeing")
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  105. "an amusing and informative paper that argues, first, that suspicion, unlike belief, does admit of degrees (p. 81), and second, that suspicion is not a belief but is, roughly, an inclination to believe (p. 86)." [Review] "Wittgenstein's Intentions" Mcdonough, Richard (1995), Dialogue p.420 doi:10.1017/S0012217300014876
  106. "In a brief, obscure, and entirely unheralded paper ... Alan White has argued there are reasons to doubt that suspicion should be classified as a weak form of belief. White contends that whereas belief does not admit of degrees, suspicion clearly does. ... White argues that unlike suspicions, which can be more or less strong, holding a belief is a digital concept – a belief is either held or it is not. Any variance in the strength of a belief is actually a variance in the conviction with which one holds the belief ... By contrast, suspicion itself clearly admits of degrees ... Unlike beliefs, it is the suspicion itself that comes in degrees rather than some additional quality attaching to the suspicion." Levi, Benjamin; Loeben, Greg (2004-07-01). "Index of suspicion: feeling not believing". Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics. 25 (4): 277–310.doi:10.1007/s11017-004-3136-8.
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