Daily Nous has reported that John Searle has died. Searle was one of the true greats of contemporary philosophy, having made huge and lasting contributions to several of its subdisciplines, but especially to philosophy of mind and philosophy of language. His work had an enormous influence on me in my undergrad and graduate student years. His books Minds, Brains, and Science, Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind, Speech Acts, and The Rediscovery of the Mind were especially formative. And his uncommonly lucid style was the main model for my own approach to philosophical writing. I had the pleasure of meeting and talking to him on several occasions, and Steven Postrel and I interviewed him for Reason magazine over twenty-five years ago.
Searle was
famously self-confident, but he had a sense of humor about it. In the Q and A session after a talk I gave at
a conference we were both at, he strongly took issue with the Aristotelianism I
was defending. After the session I told
him I was surprised he was not more open to Aristotelian arguments, given the
article his colleague Alan Code had contributed to a festschrift on Searle,
arguing that there were important parallels between Searle’s views and
Aristotle’s. With a twinkle in his eye,
he replied: “Oh yeah, I remember that article.
I thought he made Aristotle sound pretty good!”
I’ve had a
fair amount to say about Searle’s views in various places, most recently in my
book Immortal
Souls. Some readers might find
of interest a couple of papers wherein I engage with his views in depth: “Why Searle Is a Property Dualist” and “From
Aristotle to John Searle and Back Again: Formal Causes, Teleology, and
Computation in Nature.”
Searle suffered
enormous harm to his personal reputation and career in the last years of his
life. Most who know of this have only
heard one side of the story. There is
another side to it, which is given by his longtime secretary Jennifer Hudin in
an email that has been published
at Colin McGinn’s blog.
What I can say with certainty is that philosophy is in debt to his work, and that I am personally in great debt to it. Though I was never formally his student, it feels as if one of my teachers has died. Requiescat in pace.
rest in peace Searle
ReplyDeleteI had the ability to see a speech from him at Texas Christian University in about 1995. I don't remember what the speech was about, but I remember being very happy to attend.
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