F. M. Cornford

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F. M. Cornford
FBA
Born Francis Macdonald Cornford
(1874-02-27)27 February 1874
Eastbourne, England
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Cambridge, England
Spouse(s) Frances Cornford (m. 1909)
Children
Academic background
Alma mater Trinity College, Cambridge
Influences
Academic work
Discipline Classics
Institutions Trinity College, Cambridge
Notable students W. K. C. Guthrie

Francis Macdonald Cornford FBA (27 February 1874 – 3 January 1943) was an English classical scholar and translator known for work on ancient philosophy, notably Plato, Parmenides, Thucydides, and ancient Greek religion. Frances Cornford, his wife, was a noted poet. Due to the similarity in their names, he was known in the family as "FMC" and his wife as "FCC".[2]

Early life and family

Cornford was born in Eastbourne, Sussex, on 27 February 1874.[2] He attended St Paul's School, London.[2]

In 1909 Cornford married the poet Frances Darwin, daughter of Sir Francis Darwin and Ellen Wordsworth Darwin, née Crofts, and a granddaughter of Charles Darwin. They had five children:

Academic career

Cornford was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was a Fellow from 1899 and held a teaching post from 1902.[5] He became the first Laurence Professor of Ancient Philosophy in 1931 and was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1937.[2] He used wit and satire to propagate proposals for reforming the teaching of the classics at Cambridge, in Microcosmographia Academica (1908).[2]

Cornford coined the phrase "twin pillars of Platonism", referring to the theory of Forms on the one hand, and, on the other the doctrine of immortality of the soul.[6]

He died on 3 January 1943 in his home, Conduit Head in Cambridge.[2] He was cremated at Cambridge Crematorium on 6 January 1943.[2]

Works

  • Thucydides Mythistoricus (1907) put the argument that Thucydides's History of the Peloponnesian War was informed by Thucydides's tragic view.
  • From Religion to Philosophy: A Study in the Origins of Western Speculation (1912) sought the deep religious and social concepts that informed the early Greek philosophers. He returned to this in Principium Sapientiae: The Origins of Greek Philosophical Thought (posthumous, 1952).
  • Microcosmographia Academica (1908) was an insider's satire on academic politics. It was the source of catch phrases such as the "doctrine of unripeness of time", the "principle of the wedge" and the "principle of the dangerous precedent".[7][8]
  • Before and After Socrates (1932)
  • Plato's Cosmology : The Timaeus of Plato. Hackett Publishing Company (1935)
  • According to the preface to The Republic of Plato, translated with an introduction and notes (OUP, 1941), it "aims at conveying... as much as possible of the thought of the Republic in the most convenient and least misleading form."

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Johnson 2008, p. 2.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Hackforth & Gill 2004.
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  4. Hartog 1998.
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  6. Francis Cornford, 1941. The Republic of Plato. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. xxv.
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Sources

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External links

Academic offices
New office Laurence Professor of Ancient Philosophy
1930–1939
Succeeded by
Reginald Hackforth