
Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe FBA (/ˈænskəm/; 18 March 1919 – 5 January 2001), usually cited as G. E. M. Anscombe or Elizabeth Anscombe, was a Britishanalytic philosopher. She wrote on the philosophy of mind, philosophy of action, philosophical logic, philosophy of language, and ethics. She was a prominent figure of analytical Thomism, a fellow of Somerville College, Oxford, and a professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge.
G. E. M. Anscombe | |
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Born | Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe 18 March 1919 Limerick, Ireland |
Died | 5 January 2001 Cambridge, England | (aged 81)
Other names | Elizabeth Anscombe |
Education |
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Notable work |
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Spouse | Peter Geach (m. 1941) |
Children | 7 |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School |
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Institutions | University of Oxford |
Main interests |
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Notable ideas |
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Anscombe was a student of Ludwig Wittgenstein and became an authority on his work and edited and translated many books drawn from his writings, above all his Philosophical Investigations. Anscombe's 1958 article "Modern Moral Philosophy" introduced the term consequentialism into the language of analytic philosophy, and had a seminal influence on contemporary virtue ethics. Her monograph Intention (1957) was described by Donald Davidson as "the most important treatment of action since Aristotle". It is "widely considered a foundational text in contemporary philosophy of action" and has also had influence in the philosophy of practical reason."
Life
Anscombe was born to Gertrude Elizabeth (née Thomas) and Captain Allen Wells Anscombe, on 18 March 1919, in Limerick, Ireland, where her father had been stationed with the Royal Welch Fusiliers during the Irish War of Independence. Both her mother and father were involved with education. Her mother was a headmistress and her father went on to head the science and engineering side at Dulwich College.
Anscombe attended Sydenham High School and then, in 1937, went on to read literae humaniores ('Greats') at St Hugh's College, Oxford. She was awarded a second class in her honour moderations in 1939 and (albeit it with reservations on the part of her Ancient History examiners) a first in her degree finals in 1941.
While still at Sydenham High School, Anscombe converted to Catholicism. During her first year at St Hugh's, she was received into the Church, and was a practising Catholic thereafter.
In 1941 she married Peter Geach. Like her, Geach was a Catholic convert who became a student of Wittgenstein and a distinguished academic philosopher. Together they had three sons and four daughters.
After graduating from Oxford, Anscombe was awarded a research fellowship for postgraduate study at Newnham College, Cambridge, from 1942 to 1945. Her purpose was to attend Ludwig Wittgenstein's lectures. Her interest in Wittgenstein's philosophy arose from reading the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus as an undergraduate. She claimed to have conceived the idea of studying with Wittgenstein as soon as she opened the book in Blackwell's and read section 5.53, "Identity of object I express by identity of sign, and not by using a sign for identity. Difference of objects I express by difference of signs." She became an enthusiastic student, feeling that Wittgenstein's therapeutic method helped to free her from philosophical difficulties in ways that her training in traditional systematic philosophy could not. As she wrote:
For years, I would spend time, in cafés, for example, staring at objects saying to myself: 'I see a packet. But what do I really see? How can I say that I see here anything more than a yellow expanse?' ... I always hated phenomenalism and felt trapped by it. I couldn't see my way out of it but I didn't believe it. It was no good pointing to difficulties about it, things which Russell found wrong with it, for example. The strength, the central nerve of it remained alive and raged achingly. It was only in Wittgenstein's classes in 1944 that I saw the nerve being extracted, the central thought "I have got this, and I define 'yellow' (say) as this" being effectively attacked.
— Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind: The Collected Philosophical Papers of G. E. M. Anscombe, Volume 2 (1981) pp. vii–x.
After her fellowship at Cambridge ended, she was awarded a research fellowship at Somerville College, Oxford, but during the academic year of 1946/47, she continued to travel to Cambridge once a week to attend tutorials with Wittgenstein that were devoted mainly to the philosophy of religion. She became one of Wittgenstein's favourite students and one of his closest friends. Wittgenstein affectionately addressed her by the pet name "old man" – she being (according to Ray Monk) "an exception to his general dislike of academic women". His confidence in Anscombe's understanding of his perspective is shown by his choice of her as the translator of his Philosophical Investigations (for which purpose he arranged for her to spend some time in Vienna to improve her German).
Wittgenstein appointed Anscombe as one of his three literary executors and so she played a major role in translating and spreading his works.
Anscombe visited Wittgenstein many times after he left Cambridge in 1947, and Wittgenstein stayed at her house in Oxford for a period in 1950. She travelled to Cambridge in April 1951 to visit him on his deathbed. Wittgenstein named her, along with Rush Rhees and Georg Henrik von Wright, as his literary executor. After his death in 1951 she was responsible for editing, translating, and publishing many of Wittgenstein's manuscripts and notebooks.
Anscombe did not avoid controversy. As an undergraduate in 1939 she had publicly criticised Britain's entry into the Second World War. And, in 1956, while a research fellow, she unsuccessfully protested against Oxford granting an honorary degree to Harry S. Truman, whom she denounced as a mass murderer for his use of atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki. She would further publicise her position in a (sometimes erroneously dated) pamphlet privately printed soon after Truman's nomination for the degree was approved. In the same she said she "should fear to go" to the Encaenia (the degree conferral ceremony) "in case God's patience suddenly ends." She would also court controversy with some of her colleagues by defending the Catholic Church's opposition to contraception. Later in life, she would be arrested protesting outside an abortion clinic, after abortion had been legalised in Great Britain.
Having remained at Somerville College since 1946, Anscombe was elected Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge in 1970, where she served until her retirement in 1986. She was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1967, and a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1979.
In her later years, Anscombe suffered from heart disease, and was nearly killed in a car crash in 1996. She never fully recovered and she spent her last years in the care of her family in Cambridge. On 5 January 2001, she died from kidney failure at Addenbrooke's Hospital at the age of 81, with her husband and four of their seven children at her bedside, just after praying the Sorrowful Mysteries of the rosary. Anscombe's "last intentional act was kissing Peter Geach", her husband of sixty years.
Anscombe was buried adjacent to Wittgenstein in the St Giles' graveyard, Huntingdon Road, (now the Ascension Parish burial ground). Her husband joined her there in 2013.
Debate with C. S. Lewis
As a young philosophy don, Anscombe acquired a reputation as a formidable debater. In 1948, she presented a paper at a meeting of Oxford's Socratic Club in which she disputed C. S. Lewis's argument that naturalism was self-refuting (found in the third chapter of the original publication of his book Miracles). Some associates of Lewis, primarily George Sayer and Derek Brewer, have remarked that Lewis lost the subsequent debate on her paper and that this loss was so humiliating that he abandoned theological argument and turned entirely to devotional writing and children's literature. This is a claim disputed by Walter Hooper and Anscombe's impression of the effect upon Lewis differed:
The fact that Lewis rewrote that chapter, and rewrote it so that it now has those qualities [to address Anscombe's objections], shows his honesty and seriousness. The meeting of the Socratic Club at which I read my paper has been described by several of his friends as a horrible and shocking experience which upset him very much. Neither Dr Havard (who had Lewis and me to dinner a few weeks later) nor Professor Jack Bennet remembered any such feelings on Lewis' part ... My own recollection is that it was an occasion of sober discussion of certain quite definite criticisms, which Lewis' rethinking and rewriting showed he thought was accurate. I am inclined to construe the odd accounts of the matter by some of his friends – who seem not to have been interested in the actual arguments or the subject matter – as an interesting example of the phenomenon called "projection".
— Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind: The Collected Philosophical Papers of G. E. M. Anscombe, Volume 2 (1981) p. x.
As a result of the debate, Lewis substantially rewrote chapter 3 of Miracles for the 1960 paperback edition.
Work
On Wittgenstein
Some of Anscombe's most frequently cited works are translations, editions, and expositions of the work of her teacher Ludwig Wittgenstein, including an influential exegesis of Wittgenstein's 1921 book, the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. This brought to the fore the importance of Gottlob Frege for Wittgenstein's thought and, partly on that basis, attacked "positivist" interpretations of the work. She co-edited his posthumous second book, Philosophische Untersuchungen/Philosophical Investigations (1953) with Rush Rhees. Her English translation of the book appeared simultaneously and remains standard. She went on to edit or co-edit several volumes of selections from his notebooks, (co-)translating many important works like Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics (1956) and Wittgenstein's "sustained treatment" of G. E. Moore's epistemology, On Certainty (1969).
In 1978, Anscombe was awarded the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art, 1st class for her work on Wittgenstein.
Intention
Her most important work is the monograph (1957). Three volumes of collected papers were published in 1981: From Parmenides to Wittgenstein; Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind; and Ethics, Religion and Politics. Another collection, Human Life, Action and Ethics appeared posthumously in 2005.
The aim of Intention (1957) was to make plain the character of human action and will. Anscombe approaches the matter through the concept of intention, which, as she notes, has three modes of appearance in the English language:
She is X'ing intentionally | intentional action |
She is X'ing with the intention of doing Y or ... She is X'ing to Y | intention with which or further intention in acting |
She intends to Y or ... She has expressed the intention to do Y | expression of intention for the future; (what Davidson later called a pure intending) |
She suggests that a true account must somehow connect these three uses of the concept, though later students of intention have sometimes denied this, and disputed some of the things she presupposes under the first and third headings. It is clear though that it is the second that is crucial to her main purpose, which is to comprehend the way in which human thought and understanding and conceptualisation relate to the "events in a man's history", or the goings on to which he is subject.
Rather than attempt to define intentions in abstraction from actions, thus taking the third heading first, Anscombe begins with the concept of an intentional action. This soon connected with the second heading. She says that what is up with a human being is an intentional action if the question "Why", taken in a certain sense (and evidently conceived as addressed to him), has application. An agent can answer the "why" question by giving a reason or purpose for her action. "To do Y" or "because I want to do Y" would be typical answers to this sort of "why?"; though they are not the only ones, they are crucial to the constitution of the phenomenon as a typical phenomenon of human life. The agent's answer helps supply the descriptions under which the action is intentional. Anscombe was the first to clearly spell out that actions are intentional under some descriptions and not others. In her famous example, a man's action (which we might observe as consisting of moving an arm up and down while holding a handle) may be intentional under the description "pumping water" but not under other descriptions such as "contracting these muscles", "tapping out this rhythm", and so on. This approach to action influenced Donald Davidson's theory, despite the fact that Davidson went on to argue for a causal theory of action that Anscombe never accepted.
Intention (1957) is also the classic source for the idea that there is a difference in "direction of fit" between cognitive states like beliefs and conative states like desire. (This theme was later taken up and discussed by John Searle.) Cognitive states describe the world and are causally derived from the facts or objects they depict. Conative states do not describe the world, but aim to bring something about in the world. Anscombe used the example of a shopping list to illustrate the difference. The list can be a straightforward observational report of what is actually bought (thereby acting like a cognitive state), or it can function as a conative state such as a command or desire, dictating what the agent should buy. If the agent fails to buy what is listed, we do not say that the list is untrue or incorrect; we say that the mistake is in the action, not the desire. According to Anscombe, this difference in direction of fit is a major difference between speculative knowledge (theoretical, empirical knowledge) and practical knowledge (knowledge of actions and morals). Whereas "speculative knowledge" is "derived from the objects known", practical knowledge is – in a phrase Anscombe lifts from Aquinas – "the cause of what it understands".
Ethics
Anscombe made great contributions to ethics as well as metaphysics. Her 1958 essay "Modern Moral Philosophy" is credited with having coined the term "consequentialism", as well as with reviving interest in and study of virtue ethics in Western academic philosophy.
The Anscombe Bioethics Centre in Oxford is named after her, and conducts bioethical research in the Catholic tradition.
Brute and institutional facts
Anscombe also introduced the idea of a set of facts being 'brute relative to' some fact. When a set of facts xyz stands in this relation to a fact A, they are a subset out of a range some subset among which holds if A holds. Thus if A is the fact that I have paid for something, the brute facts might be that I have handed him a cheque for a sum which he has named as the price for the goods, saying that this is the payment, or that I gave him some cash at the time that he gave me the goods. There tends, according to Anscombe, to be an institutional context which gives its point to the description 'A', but of which 'A' is not itself a description: that I have given someone a shilling is not a description of the institution of money or of the currency of the country. According to her, no brute facts xyz can generally be said to entail the fact A relative to which they are 'brute' except with the proviso "under normal circumstances", for "one cannot mention all the things that were not the case, which would have made a difference if they had been." A set of facts xyz ... may be brute relative to a fact A which itself is one of a set of facts ABC ... which is brute relative to some further fact W. Thus Anscombe's account is not of a distinct class of facts, to be distinguished from another class, 'institutional facts': the essential relation is that of a set of facts being 'brute relative to' some fact. Following Anscombe, John Searle derived another conception of 'brute facts' as non-mental facts to play the foundational role and generate similar hierarchies in his philosophical account of speech acts and institutional reality.
First person
Her paper "The First Person" buttressed remarks by Wittgenstein (in his Lectures on "Private Experience") arguing for the now-notorious conclusion that the first-person pronoun, "I", does not refer to anything (not, e.g., to the speaker) because of its immunity from reference failure. Having shown by counter-example that 'I' does not refer to the body, Anscombe objected to the implied Cartesianism of its referring at all. Few people accept the conclusion – though the position was later adopted in a more radical form by David Lewis – but the paper was an important contribution to work on indexicals and self-consciousness that has been carried on by philosophers as varied as John Perry, Peter Strawson, David Kaplan, Gareth Evans, John McDowell, and Sebastian Rödl.
Causality
In her article, "Causality and Determination", Anscombe defends two main ideas: that causal relations are perceivable, and that causation does not require a necessary connection and a universal generalization linking cause and effect. Regarding her idea that causal relations are perceivable, she believes that we perceive the causal relations between objects and events.
In defending her idea that causal relations are perceivable, Anscombe poses a question "How did we come by our primary knowledge of causality?". She proposes two answers to this question:
- By "learning to speak, we learned the linguistic representation and application of a host of causal concepts"
- By observing that some action(s) caused a certain event
In proposing her first answer, that by "learning to speak, we learned the linguistic representation and application of a host of causal concepts", Anscombe thinks that by learning to speak we already have a linguistic representation of certain causal concepts and she gives an example of transitive verbs, such as scrape, push, carry, knock over.
Example: I knocked over a vase of flowers.
In proposing her second answer, that by observing some actions we can see causation, Anscombe thinks that we cannot ignore the fact that certain actions, which produced a certain event are possible to observe.
Example: a cat spilled milk.
The second idea that Anscombe defends in the article "Causality and Determination" is that causation requires neither a necessary connection nor a universal generalization linking cause and effect.
Anscombe states that it is assumed that causality is some kind of necessary connection.
Views of her work
The philosopher Candace Vogler says that Anscombe's "strength" is that "'when she is writing for [a] Catholic audience, she presumes they share certain fundamental beliefs,' but she is equally willing to write for people who do not share her assumptions." In 2010, philosopher Roger Scruton wrote that Anscombe was "perhaps the last great philosopher writing in English".Mary Warnock described her as "the undoubted giant among women philosophers" while John Haldane said she "certainly has a good claim to be the greatest woman philosopher of whom we know".
See also
- Chastity Clubs in the United States, many of which are named "Anscombe Society" in her honor
Bibliography
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (July 2016) |
Books
- Intention. Oxford: Blackwell. 1957.
- An Introduction to Wittgenstein's Tractatus. 1959.
- Three Philosophers. With P. T. Geach. 1961.
- Causality and Determination: an inaugural lecture. CUP Archive. 1971. ISBN 978-0-521-08304-1. reprinted in Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind.
- Times, Beginnings and Causes (PDF). Oxford University Press [for the British Academy]. 1975. ISBN 978-0-19-725712-8.
- From Parmenides to Wittgenstein. The Collected Philosophical Papers of G. E. M. Anscombe. Vol. 1. 1981. ISBN 978-0-631-12922-6.
- Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind. The Collected Philosophical Papers of G. E. M. Anscombe. Vol. 2. Oxford: Blackwell. 1981. ISBN 978-0-631-12932-5.
- Ethics, Religion and Politics. The Collected Philosophical Papers of G. E. M. Anscombe. Vol. 3. 1981. ISBN 978-0-631-12942-4.
- Human Life, Action and Ethics. Edited by Mary Geach; Luke Gormally. St. Andrews Studies in Philosophy and Public Affairs. 4. Exeter, England: Imprint Academic. 2005. ISBN 978-1-84540-013-2
- La filosofia analitica y la espiritualidad del hombre (in Spanish). Edited by J. M. Torralba; J. Nubiola. Pamplona, Spain: Ediciones de la Universidad de Navarra S.A. 2005. ISBN 978-84-313-2245-8.
- Faith in a Hard Ground: Essays on Religion, Philosophy and Ethics. Edited by Mary Geach; Luke Gormally. St. Andrews Studies in Philosophy and Public Affairs. 11. Exeter, England: Imprint Academic. 2008. ISBN 978-1-84540-121-4
- From Plato to Wittgenstein. Edited by Mary Geach; Luke Gormally. St. Andrews Studies in Philosophy and Public Affairs. 18. Exeter, England: Imprint Academic. 2011. ISBN 978-1-84540-232-7
Select papers/book chapters
- Anscombe, G. E. M. (1957). "XIV.—Intention". Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society. 57: 321–332. doi:10.1093/aristotelian/57.1.321.
- "On Brute Facts" (PDF). Analysis. 18 (3). Oxford: Oxford University Press: 69–72. 1958. doi:10.2307/3326788. ISSN 0003-2638. JSTOR 3326788.
- Austin, J. L.; Anscombe, G. E. M. (1958). "Pretending". Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume. 32. Aristotelian Society: 261–294. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/32.1.261.
- G. E. M. Anscombe; J. Körner (12 July 1964). "Substance". Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume. 38 (1). Aristotelian Society: 69–90. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/38.1.69. XIV.—
- "Times, Beginnings and Causes" Proceedings of the British Academy 60, 1974 (1975)
- Anscombe, G.E.M. "Memory, 'Experience' and Causation" in: Lewis, Hywel David (ed.) Contemporary British Philosophy Personal Statements Fourth Series (1976)
- Anscombe, G.E.M. "'Soft' determinism" in: Gilbert Ryle (ed.), Contemporary aspects of philosophy (1977)
- Lockwood, Michael; Anscombe, G. E. M. (1983). "Sins of Omission? The Non-Treatment of Controls in Clinical Trials". Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume. 57. Aristotelian Society: 207–227. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/57.1.207.
Festschriften
- Gormally, Luke, ed. (1994). Moral truth and Moral Tradition: Essays in Honour of Peter Geach and Elizabeth Anscombe. Dublin: Four Courts Press.
References
Citations
- Boxer, Sarah (13 January 2001). "G. E. M. Anscombe, 81, British Philosopher". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
- "Ninety-four pages & then some: Roger Teichmann interviewed by Richard Marshall". 3:16. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
Anscombe's paper was rightly credited with having helped start up the renewed interest in Aristotelian ethics, an interest which produced what is now often called 'virtue ethics'.
- Wiseman, Rachael (1 January 2015). "Anscombe's Intention". Jurisprudence. 6 (1): 182–193. doi:10.5235/20403313.6.l.182 (inactive 1 November 2024). ISSN 2040-3313.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - Stoutland, Frederick (2011). "Introduction: Anscombe's Intention in Context". Essays on Anscombe's Intention. Anton Ford, Jennifer Hornsby, Frederick Stoutland. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 1–22. doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674060913.intro. ISBN 978-0-674-06091-3. OCLC 754715004.
- Singh, Keshav (30 December 2020). "Anscombe on Acting for Reasons". In Chang, Ruth; Kurt, Sylvan (eds.). The Routledge Handbook of Practical Reason. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-33712-9.
- Teichman, Jenny (2003). "Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe, 1919–2001" (PDF). In Thompson, F.M.L (ed.). Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 115 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, I. British Academy. doi:10.5871/bacad/9780197262788.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-175421-0.
- Teichman, Jenny (2017). "Anscombe, (Gertrude) Elizabeth Margaret (1919–2001), philosopher | Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/75032. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
- Teichmann, Roger (2008). "Introduction". The Philosophy of Elizabeth Anscombe. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-153845-2. OCLC 269285454.
The philosophy examiners wanted to give her a First ... but the ancient history examiners would agree to this only on condition that she showed a minimum knowledge of their subject in a viva voce (oral) examination. Anscombe's performance ... was less than spectacular... To the last two questions she answered 'No', these being 'Can you give us the name of a Roman provincial governor?' and (in some desperation) 'Is there any fact about the period you are supposed to have studied which you would like to tell us?' The examiners cannot have been well pleased, but somehow or other ended up being persuaded by the philosophers ... As Michael Dummett writes in his obituary ... 'For the [ancient historians] to have yielded, her philosophy papers must have been astonishing'.
- Drury, M. O'C. (Maurice O'Connor) (21 September 2017). The selected writings of Maurice O'Connor Drury : on Wittgenstein, philosophy, religion and psychiatry. Hayes, John (Professor of Philosophy). London. pp. 407–409. ISBN 978-1-4742-5636-0. OCLC 946967786.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Monk, Ray. (1990). Ludwig Wittgenstein : the duty of genius (1st American ed.). New York: Free Press. pp. 497–498. ISBN 0-02-921670-2. OCLC 21560991.
- Driver, Julia (2018), "Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2018 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 19 June 2019
- The Oxford Handbook of Wittgenstein. Kuusela, Oskari., McGinn, Marie. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2011. pp. 715 (fn.2). ISBN 978-0-19-928750-5. OCLC 764568769.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - Michael L. Coulter; Richard S. Myers; Joseph A. Varacalli (2012). Encyclopedia of Catholic Social Thought, Social Science, and Social Policy Supplement. Vol. 3. Scarecrow Press. p. 6. ISBN 9780810882751.
- Malcolm, Norman (1967). Ludwig Wittgenstein: A Memoir. Oxford University Press. p. 97.
- "Professor G E M Anscombe". The Daily Telegraph. 6 January 2001. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
In the autumn of 1939, while still an undergraduate, she and a friend wrote a pamphlet entitled The Justice of the Present War Examined. In this, Elizabeth Anscombe argued that while Britain was certainly fighting against an unjust cause, it was not fighting for a just one. ... Subsequently, the Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham told the two students to withdraw the pamphlet because they had described it as Catholic without getting a Church licence.
- Meyers, Diana Tietjens (2008). "Anscombe, Elizabeth". In Smith, Bonnie G. (ed.). The Oxford encyclopedia of women in world history. Oxford [England]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-514890-9. OCLC 167505633.
Anscombe ... opposed Britain's entry into World War II on the grounds that fighting the war would certainly involve killing non-combatants. When Oxford decided to award the U.S. president Harry Truman an honorary degree in 1956, Anscombe protested vigorously, arguing that the atomic bombing of innocent civilians at Hiroshima and Nagasaki disqualified him for such an honour.
- "Elizabeth Anscombe // de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture // University of Notre Dame". ethicscenter.nd.edu. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
Anscombe ... was a vigorous opponent of the use of nuclear weapons and led a protest of Oxford's awarding a degree to President Harry Truman on the grounds that a mass-murderer should not be so honoured. She was also a fierce opponent of abortion; on one occasion late in her life, she had to be dragged bodily by police away from a sit-in at an abortion clinic.
- Wiseman, Rachael (2016). "The Intended and Unintended Consequences of Intention" (PDF). American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly. 90 (2): 207–227. doi:10.5840/acpq201622982. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
On 1st May 1956, Oxford University's Convocation ...considered nominations for honorary degrees ... One of the nominations was Harry S. Truman ... Anscombe ..."caused a small stir" ... by arguing that the nomination should be rejected on the grounds that Truman was guilty of mass murder ... Anscombe's speech did not persuade ...The House was asked to indicate its attitude toward the nomination, and showed overwhelming support. ... On 20th June, Truman was awarded his honorary degree
- Gormally, L. – Kietzmann, C. – Torralba, J. M., Bibliography of Works by G.E.M. Anscombe, Seventh Version – June 2012 The date in CP is "1957" and there is no date in the original pamphlet. However, according to the facts it must have been published in 1956. The Honorary Degree was conferred on June 20th. 1956 and the Bodleian stamp of the pamphlet is "11 July 1956". See Torralba, J. M., Acción intencional y razonamiento práctico según G.E.M. Anscombe, Pamplona: Eunsa, 2005, pp. 58-61.
- "G. E. M. Anscombe "Mr. Truman's Degree"". 1956. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
- "Rare Pics Surface of Elizabeth Anscombe Arrested for Blocking Abortion Clinic". ChurchPOP. 18 October 2016. Retrieved 13 June 2019.
- "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter A" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
- Rutler, George W. (1 September 2004). "Cloud of Witnesses: G.E.M Anscombe". Crisis Magazine. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
- Dolan, John M. (1 May 2001). "G. E. M. Anscombe: Living the Truth". First Things. Retrieved 30 August 2024.
- Hayes, John (2020). "G.E.M. ANSCOMBE—Irish-born philosopher". History Ireland. 28 (5): 42–44. ISSN 0791-8224. JSTOR 26934660.
- "Frequently Asked Questions about C.S. Lewis". Biblical Discernment Ministries. 1999. Archived from the original on 24 October 2005. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- "Truth about Anscombe v C S Lewis". The Telegraph. 11 January 2001. Archived from the original on 24 March 2021. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
when writing my C. S. Lewis: a Companion and Guide (1996). Lewis told me in 1963 that he thought he won the debate with Anscombe at the Socratic Club in 1948. However, he accepted that he had been unclear and revised Chapter III of the book. Ironically, many philosophers disagree with Anscombe's argument, and maintain that the original chapter was philosophically sound, and that Lewis did not need to rewrite it. It is also not true that Lewis "never again wrote straightforward polemics for Christianity". In 1952, he revised his BBC wartime broadcasts as Mere Christianity. That book has probably caused more people to accept the faith than any other philosophical tome of the last century. Lewis was a man of such titanic imagination that he didn't need to go over and over the same ideas. It was not fear of Anscombe or anyone else that caused him to write the seven incomparable Chronicles of Narnia in the 1950s. Three theological works followed them.
- Smilde, Arend (6 December 2017). "What Lewis really did to Miracles A philosophical layman's attempt to understand the Anscombe affair". Journal of Inklings Studies. 1 (2): 9–24. doi:10.3366/ink.2011.1.2.3.
- Anscombe, G. E. M. (1959). An Introduction to Wittgenstein's Tractatus. London: Hutchinson.
- Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1969). On Certainty. Oxford: BasilBlackwell.
- "Reply to a Parliamentary Question" (PDF) (in German). Vienna. p. 521. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- Anscombe 1957, sec. 5–8.
- Anscombe 1957, sec. 18–21.
- Anscombe, G. E. M. (1981). Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind (collected papers vol 2). Oxford: Basil Blackwell. pp. 21–36. ISBN 0-631-12932-4.
- Anscombe 1957.
- Searle, John R. (1983). Intentionality, an essay in the philosophy of mind. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-22895-6. OCLC 9196773.
- Anscombe 1957, sec. 32.
- Anscombe 1957, sec. 48.
- Seidel, Christian (2019). Consequentialism: new directions, new problems. Oxford moral theory. New York (N.Y.): Oxford university press. pp. 2–3. ISBN 978-0-19-027011-7.
- Haldane, John (2000). "In Memoriam: G. E. M. Anscombe (1919–2001)" (PDF). The Review of Metaphysics. 53 (4): 1019–1021. ISSN 0034-6632.
- Crisp, Roger; Slote, Michael (1997). "Introduction". In Crisp, Roger; Slote, Michael (eds.). Virtue ethics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 3. ISBN 0-19-875189-3. OCLC 37028589.
- "Home". bioethics.org.uk.
- Anscombe, G. E. M. (1958). "On Brute Facts". Analysis. 18 (3): 69–72. doi:10.2307/3326788. JSTOR 3326788.
- Searle, John (1995). The Construction of Social Reality. London: Allen Lane The Penguin Press. pp. 120–121. ISBN 0-14-023590-6.
- Wittgenstein, Lugwig (1993). "Notes for Lectures on "Private Experience" and "Sense Data"". In Klagge, J.; Nordmann, A. (eds.). Philosophical Occasions. Indianapolis: Hackett. p. 228.
- "Into the Coast: Sebastian Rödl". 10 January 2019.
- Anscombe, G.E.M. "Causality and Determination". Metaphysics, edited by Jaegwon Kim, Daniel Z. Korman and Ernest Sosa, Wiley-Blackwell, 2012, pp. 386-396.
- Oppenheimer, Mark (8 January 2011). "Renaissance for Outspoken Catholic Philosopher". The New York Times. p. A14. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Scruton, Roger (2010). "Wine and Philosophy". Decanter. Vol. 35. pp. 57–59. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Warnock, Mary, ed. (1996). Women Philosophers. London: J.M.Dent & Sons Ltd. p. 203. ISBN 0-460-87738-0. OCLC 34407377.
the undoubted giant among women philosophers, a writer of immense breadth, authority and penetration.
Sources
- Anscombe (1957). Intention. Oxford: Blackwell. 1957.
Further reading
- Anscombe, G. E. M. (1975). "The First Person". In Guttenplan, Samuel (ed.). Mind and Language. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- ——— (1981). "On Transubstantiation". Ethics, Religion and Politics. The Collected Philosophical Papers of G. E. M. Anscombe. Vol. 3. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 107–112. ISBN 978-0-631-12942-4 – via Second Spring.
- ——— (1993) [rev. ed. first published 1975]. "Contraception and Chastity [rev. ed.]" (PDF). In Smith, Janet E. (ed.). Why Humanae Vitae Was Right: A Reader. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 November 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Doyle, Bob. "G. E. M. Anscombe". The Information Philosopher. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
- Driver, Julia (2014). "Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, California: Stanford University. ISSN 1095-5054. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Gormally, Luke (2011). "G E M Anscombe (1919–2001)" (PDF). Oxford: Anscombe Bioethics Centre. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2021. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- O'Grady, Jane (11 January 2011). "Elizabeth Anscombe". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- "Portrait of a Catholic Philosopher". Oxford: Anscombe Bioethics Centre. Archived from the original on 21 January 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Mac Cumhaill, Clare; Wiseman, Rachael (2022). Metaphysical animals : how four women brought philosophy back to life. London. ISBN 978-0-385-54570-9. OCLC 1289274891.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - "Professor G E M Anscombe". The Telegraph. London. 22 November 2001. Archived from the original on 7 April 2008. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Richter, Duncan. "G. E. M. Anscombe (1919–2001)". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. ISSN 2161-0002. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Rutler, George W. (2004). "G. E. M. Anscombe". Cloud of Witnesses. Crisis. Vol. 22, no. 8. Washington: Morley Publishing Group. Archived from the original on 14 August 2007. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- Teichman, Jenny (2003). "Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe, 1919–2001". In Thompson, F. M. L. (ed.). Biographical Memoirs of Fellows. Volume 1. Proceedings of the British Academy. Vol. 115. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.5871/bacad/9780197262788.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-726278-8.
- Torralba, José M. (2014). "G.E.M. Anscombe Bibliography". Pamplona, Spain: University of Navarra. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
- Wallgren, Thomas H., ed. (2024). The Creation of Wittgenstein: Understanding the Roles of Rush Rhees, Elizabeth Anscombe and Georg Henrik von Wright. Bloomsbury Publishing.
External links
- "Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe, 1919–2001" Teichman, Jenny (2003). Proceedings of The British Academy 115, p. 31-50
- "Great Thinkers: Jane Heal FBA on Elizabeth Anscombe FBA" British Academy blog podcast with Rachael Wiseman (13 May 2019)
Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe FBA ˈ ae n s k e m 18 March 1919 5 January 2001 usually cited as G E M Anscombe or Elizabeth Anscombe was a Britishanalytic philosopher She wrote on the philosophy of mind philosophy of action philosophical logic philosophy of language and ethics She was a prominent figure of analytical Thomism a fellow of Somerville College Oxford and a professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge G E M AnscombeFBABornGertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe 1919 03 18 18 March 1919 Limerick IrelandDied5 January 2001 2001 01 05 aged 81 Cambridge EnglandOther namesElizabeth AnscombeEducationSt Hugh s College Oxford BA Newnham College CambridgeNotable workIntention 1957 Modern Moral Philosophy 1958 SpousePeter Geach m 1941 wbr Children7Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic philosophyAnalytical ThomismInstitutionsUniversity of OxfordMain interestsEthicslogicphilosophy of actionphilosophy of languagephilosophy of mindNotable ideasActing under a description Brute facts Coining consequentialism Direction of fit Revival of virtue ethics Anscombe was a student of Ludwig Wittgenstein and became an authority on his work and edited and translated many books drawn from his writings above all his Philosophical Investigations Anscombe s 1958 article Modern Moral Philosophy introduced the term consequentialism into the language of analytic philosophy and had a seminal influence on contemporary virtue ethics Her monograph Intention 1957 was described by Donald Davidson as the most important treatment of action since Aristotle It is widely considered a foundational text in contemporary philosophy of action and has also had influence in the philosophy of practical reason LifeAnscombe was born to Gertrude Elizabeth nee Thomas and Captain Allen Wells Anscombe on 18 March 1919 in Limerick Ireland where her father had been stationed with the Royal Welch Fusiliers during the Irish War of Independence Both her mother and father were involved with education Her mother was a headmistress and her father went on to head the science and engineering side at Dulwich College Anscombe attended Sydenham High School and then in 1937 went on to read literae humaniores Greats at St Hugh s College Oxford She was awarded a second class in her honour moderations in 1939 and albeit it with reservations on the part of her Ancient History examiners a first in her degree finals in 1941 While still at Sydenham High School Anscombe converted to Catholicism During her first year at St Hugh s she was received into the Church and was a practising Catholic thereafter In 1941 she married Peter Geach Like her Geach was a Catholic convert who became a student of Wittgenstein and a distinguished academic philosopher Together they had three sons and four daughters After graduating from Oxford Anscombe was awarded a research fellowship for postgraduate study at Newnham College Cambridge from 1942 to 1945 Her purpose was to attend Ludwig Wittgenstein s lectures Her interest in Wittgenstein s philosophy arose from reading the Tractatus Logico Philosophicus as an undergraduate She claimed to have conceived the idea of studying with Wittgenstein as soon as she opened the book in Blackwell s and read section 5 53 Identity of object I express by identity of sign and not by using a sign for identity Difference of objects I express by difference of signs She became an enthusiastic student feeling that Wittgenstein s therapeutic method helped to free her from philosophical difficulties in ways that her training in traditional systematic philosophy could not As she wrote For years I would spend time in cafes for example staring at objects saying to myself I see a packet But what do I really see How can I say that I see here anything more than a yellow expanse I always hated phenomenalism and felt trapped by it I couldn t see my way out of it but I didn t believe it It was no good pointing to difficulties about it things which Russell found wrong with it for example The strength the central nerve of it remained alive and raged achingly It was only in Wittgenstein s classes in 1944 that I saw the nerve being extracted the central thought I have got this and I define yellow say as this being effectively attacked Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind The Collected Philosophical Papers of G E M Anscombe Volume 2 1981 pp vii x After her fellowship at Cambridge ended she was awarded a research fellowship at Somerville College Oxford but during the academic year of 1946 47 she continued to travel to Cambridge once a week to attend tutorials with Wittgenstein that were devoted mainly to the philosophy of religion She became one of Wittgenstein s favourite students and one of his closest friends Wittgenstein affectionately addressed her by the pet name old man she being according to Ray Monk an exception to his general dislike of academic women His confidence in Anscombe s understanding of his perspective is shown by his choice of her as the translator of his Philosophical Investigations for which purpose he arranged for her to spend some time in Vienna to improve her German Wittgenstein appointed Anscombe as one of his three literary executors and so she played a major role in translating and spreading his works Anscombe visited Wittgenstein many times after he left Cambridge in 1947 and Wittgenstein stayed at her house in Oxford for a period in 1950 She travelled to Cambridge in April 1951 to visit him on his deathbed Wittgenstein named her along with Rush Rhees and Georg Henrik von Wright as his literary executor After his death in 1951 she was responsible for editing translating and publishing many of Wittgenstein s manuscripts and notebooks Anscombe did not avoid controversy As an undergraduate in 1939 she had publicly criticised Britain s entry into the Second World War And in 1956 while a research fellow she unsuccessfully protested against Oxford granting an honorary degree to Harry S Truman whom she denounced as a mass murderer for his use of atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki She would further publicise her position in a sometimes erroneously dated pamphlet privately printed soon after Truman s nomination for the degree was approved In the same she said she should fear to go to the Encaenia the degree conferral ceremony in case God s patience suddenly ends She would also court controversy with some of her colleagues by defending the Catholic Church s opposition to contraception Later in life she would be arrested protesting outside an abortion clinic after abortion had been legalised in Great Britain Having remained at Somerville College since 1946 Anscombe was elected Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge in 1970 where she served until her retirement in 1986 She was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1967 and a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1979 In her later years Anscombe suffered from heart disease and was nearly killed in a car crash in 1996 She never fully recovered and she spent her last years in the care of her family in Cambridge On 5 January 2001 she died from kidney failure at Addenbrooke s Hospital at the age of 81 with her husband and four of their seven children at her bedside just after praying the Sorrowful Mysteries of the rosary Anscombe s last intentional act was kissing Peter Geach her husband of sixty years Anscombe was buried adjacent to Wittgenstein in the St Giles graveyard Huntingdon Road now the Ascension Parish burial ground Her husband joined her there in 2013 Debate with C S Lewis As a young philosophy don Anscombe acquired a reputation as a formidable debater In 1948 she presented a paper at a meeting of Oxford s Socratic Club in which she disputed C S Lewis s argument that naturalism was self refuting found in the third chapter of the original publication of his book Miracles Some associates of Lewis primarily George Sayer and Derek Brewer have remarked that Lewis lost the subsequent debate on her paper and that this loss was so humiliating that he abandoned theological argument and turned entirely to devotional writing and children s literature This is a claim disputed by Walter Hooper and Anscombe s impression of the effect upon Lewis differed The fact that Lewis rewrote that chapter and rewrote it so that it now has those qualities to address Anscombe s objections shows his honesty and seriousness The meeting of the Socratic Club at which I read my paper has been described by several of his friends as a horrible and shocking experience which upset him very much Neither Dr Havard who had Lewis and me to dinner a few weeks later nor Professor Jack Bennet remembered any such feelings on Lewis part My own recollection is that it was an occasion of sober discussion of certain quite definite criticisms which Lewis rethinking and rewriting showed he thought was accurate I am inclined to construe the odd accounts of the matter by some of his friends who seem not to have been interested in the actual arguments or the subject matter as an interesting example of the phenomenon called projection Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind The Collected Philosophical Papers of G E M Anscombe Volume 2 1981 p x As a result of the debate Lewis substantially rewrote chapter 3 of Miracles for the 1960 paperback edition WorkOn Wittgenstein Some of Anscombe s most frequently cited works are translations editions and expositions of the work of her teacher Ludwig Wittgenstein including an influential exegesis of Wittgenstein s 1921 book the Tractatus Logico Philosophicus This brought to the fore the importance of Gottlob Frege for Wittgenstein s thought and partly on that basis attacked positivist interpretations of the work She co edited his posthumous second book Philosophische Untersuchungen Philosophical Investigations 1953 with Rush Rhees Her English translation of the book appeared simultaneously and remains standard She went on to edit or co edit several volumes of selections from his notebooks co translating many important works like Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics 1956 and Wittgenstein s sustained treatment of G E Moore s epistemology On Certainty 1969 In 1978 Anscombe was awarded the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art 1st class for her work on Wittgenstein Intention Her most important work is the monograph 1957 Three volumes of collected papers were published in 1981 From Parmenides to Wittgenstein Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind and Ethics Religion and Politics Another collection Human Life Action and Ethics appeared posthumously in 2005 The aim of Intention 1957 was to make plain the character of human action and will Anscombe approaches the matter through the concept of intention which as she notes has three modes of appearance in the English language She is X ing intentionally intentional actionShe is X ing with the intention of doing Y or She is X ing to Y intention with which or further intention in actingShe intends to Y or She has expressed the intention to do Y expression of intention for the future what Davidson later called a pure intending She suggests that a true account must somehow connect these three uses of the concept though later students of intention have sometimes denied this and disputed some of the things she presupposes under the first and third headings It is clear though that it is the second that is crucial to her main purpose which is to comprehend the way in which human thought and understanding and conceptualisation relate to the events in a man s history or the goings on to which he is subject Rather than attempt to define intentions in abstraction from actions thus taking the third heading first Anscombe begins with the concept of an intentional action This soon connected with the second heading She says that what is up with a human being is an intentional action if the question Why taken in a certain sense and evidently conceived as addressed to him has application An agent can answer the why question by giving a reason or purpose for her action To do Y or because I want to do Y would be typical answers to this sort of why though they are not the only ones they are crucial to the constitution of the phenomenon as a typical phenomenon of human life The agent s answer helps supply the descriptions under which the action is intentional Anscombe was the first to clearly spell out that actions are intentional under some descriptions and not others In her famous example a man s action which we might observe as consisting of moving an arm up and down while holding a handle may be intentional under the description pumping water but not under other descriptions such as contracting these muscles tapping out this rhythm and so on This approach to action influenced Donald Davidson s theory despite the fact that Davidson went on to argue for a causal theory of action that Anscombe never accepted Intention 1957 is also the classic source for the idea that there is a difference in direction of fit between cognitive states like beliefs and conative states like desire This theme was later taken up and discussed by John Searle Cognitive states describe the world and are causally derived from the facts or objects they depict Conative states do not describe the world but aim to bring something about in the world Anscombe used the example of a shopping list to illustrate the difference The list can be a straightforward observational report of what is actually bought thereby acting like a cognitive state or it can function as a conative state such as a command or desire dictating what the agent should buy If the agent fails to buy what is listed we do not say that the list is untrue or incorrect we say that the mistake is in the action not the desire According to Anscombe this difference in direction of fit is a major difference between speculative knowledge theoretical empirical knowledge and practical knowledge knowledge of actions and morals Whereas speculative knowledge is derived from the objects known practical knowledge is in a phrase Anscombe lifts from Aquinas the cause of what it understands Ethics Anscombe made great contributions to ethics as well as metaphysics Her 1958 essay Modern Moral Philosophy is credited with having coined the term consequentialism as well as with reviving interest in and study of virtue ethics in Western academic philosophy The Anscombe Bioethics Centre in Oxford is named after her and conducts bioethical research in the Catholic tradition Brute and institutional facts Anscombe also introduced the idea of a set of facts being brute relative to some fact When a set of facts xyz stands in this relation to a fact A they are a subset out of a range some subset among which holds if A holds Thus if A is the fact that I have paid for something the brute facts might be that I have handed him a cheque for a sum which he has named as the price for the goods saying that this is the payment or that I gave him some cash at the time that he gave me the goods There tends according to Anscombe to be an institutional context which gives its point to the description A but of which A is not itself a description that I have given someone a shilling is not a description of the institution of money or of the currency of the country According to her no brute facts xyz can generally be said to entail the fact A relative to which they are brute except with the proviso under normal circumstances for one cannot mention all the things that were not the case which would have made a difference if they had been A set of facts xyz may be brute relative to a fact A which itself is one of a set of facts ABC which is brute relative to some further fact W Thus Anscombe s account is not of a distinct class of facts to be distinguished from another class institutional facts the essential relation is that of a set of facts being brute relative to some fact Following Anscombe John Searle derived another conception of brute facts as non mental facts to play the foundational role and generate similar hierarchies in his philosophical account of speech acts and institutional reality First person Her paper The First Person buttressed remarks by Wittgenstein in his Lectures on Private Experience arguing for the now notorious conclusion that the first person pronoun I does not refer to anything not e g to the speaker because of its immunity from reference failure Having shown by counter example that I does not refer to the body Anscombe objected to the implied Cartesianism of its referring at all Few people accept the conclusion though the position was later adopted in a more radical form by David Lewis but the paper was an important contribution to work on indexicals and self consciousness that has been carried on by philosophers as varied as John Perry Peter Strawson David Kaplan Gareth Evans John McDowell and Sebastian Rodl Causality In her article Causality and Determination Anscombe defends two main ideas that causal relations are perceivable and that causation does not require a necessary connection and a universal generalization linking cause and effect Regarding her idea that causal relations are perceivable she believes that we perceive the causal relations between objects and events In defending her idea that causal relations are perceivable Anscombe poses a question How did we come by our primary knowledge of causality She proposes two answers to this question By learning to speak we learned the linguistic representation and application of a host of causal concepts By observing that some action s caused a certain event In proposing her first answer that by learning to speak we learned the linguistic representation and application of a host of causal concepts Anscombe thinks that by learning to speak we already have a linguistic representation of certain causal concepts and she gives an example of transitive verbs such as scrape push carry knock over Example I knocked over a vase of flowers In proposing her second answer that by observing some actions we can see causation Anscombe thinks that we cannot ignore the fact that certain actions which produced a certain event are possible to observe Example a cat spilled milk The second idea that Anscombe defends in the article Causality and Determination is that causation requires neither a necessary connection nor a universal generalization linking cause and effect Anscombe states that it is assumed that causality is some kind of necessary connection Views of her workThe philosopher Candace Vogler says that Anscombe s strength is that when she is writing for a Catholic audience she presumes they share certain fundamental beliefs but she is equally willing to write for people who do not share her assumptions In 2010 philosopher Roger Scruton wrote that Anscombe was perhaps the last great philosopher writing in English Mary Warnock described her as the undoubted giant among women philosophers while John Haldane said she certainly has a good claim to be the greatest woman philosopher of whom we know See alsoChastity Clubs in the United States many of which are named Anscombe Society in her honorBibliographyThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2016 Books Intention Oxford Blackwell 1957 An Introduction to Wittgenstein s Tractatus 1959 Three Philosophers With P T Geach 1961 Causality and Determination an inaugural lecture CUP Archive 1971 ISBN 978 0 521 08304 1 reprinted in Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind Times Beginnings and Causes PDF Oxford University Press for the British Academy 1975 ISBN 978 0 19 725712 8 From Parmenides to Wittgenstein The Collected Philosophical Papers of G E M Anscombe Vol 1 1981 ISBN 978 0 631 12922 6 Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind The Collected Philosophical Papers of G E M Anscombe Vol 2 Oxford Blackwell 1981 ISBN 978 0 631 12932 5 Ethics Religion and Politics The Collected Philosophical Papers of G E M Anscombe Vol 3 1981 ISBN 978 0 631 12942 4 Human Life Action and Ethics Edited by Mary Geach Luke Gormally St Andrews Studies in Philosophy and Public Affairs 4 Exeter England Imprint Academic 2005 ISBN 978 1 84540 013 2 La filosofia analitica y la espiritualidad del hombre in Spanish Edited by J M Torralba J Nubiola Pamplona Spain Ediciones de la Universidad de Navarra S A 2005 ISBN 978 84 313 2245 8 Faith in a Hard Ground Essays on Religion Philosophy and Ethics Edited by Mary Geach Luke Gormally St Andrews Studies in Philosophy and Public Affairs 11 Exeter England Imprint Academic 2008 ISBN 978 1 84540 121 4 From Plato to Wittgenstein Edited by Mary Geach Luke Gormally St Andrews Studies in Philosophy and Public Affairs 18 Exeter England Imprint Academic 2011 ISBN 978 1 84540 232 7Select papers book chapters Anscombe G E M 1957 XIV Intention Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 57 321 332 doi 10 1093 aristotelian 57 1 321 On Brute Facts PDF Analysis 18 3 Oxford Oxford University Press 69 72 1958 doi 10 2307 3326788 ISSN 0003 2638 JSTOR 3326788 Austin J L Anscombe G E M 1958 Pretending Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 32 Aristotelian Society 261 294 doi 10 1093 aristoteliansupp 32 1 261 G E M Anscombe J Korner 12 July 1964 Substance Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 38 1 Aristotelian Society 69 90 doi 10 1093 aristoteliansupp 38 1 69 XIV Times Beginnings and Causes Proceedings of the British Academy 60 1974 1975 Anscombe G E M Memory Experience and Causation in Lewis Hywel David ed Contemporary British Philosophy Personal Statements Fourth Series 1976 Anscombe G E M Soft determinism in Gilbert Ryle ed Contemporary aspects of philosophy 1977 Lockwood Michael Anscombe G E M 1983 Sins of Omission The Non Treatment of Controls in Clinical Trials Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 57 Aristotelian Society 207 227 doi 10 1093 aristoteliansupp 57 1 207 Festschriften Gormally Luke ed 1994 Moral truth and Moral Tradition Essays in Honour of Peter Geach and Elizabeth Anscombe Dublin Four Courts Press ReferencesCitations Boxer Sarah 13 January 2001 G E M Anscombe 81 British Philosopher The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Ninety four pages amp then some Roger Teichmann interviewed by Richard Marshall 3 16 Retrieved 14 June 2021 Anscombe s paper was rightly credited with having helped start up the renewed interest in Aristotelian ethics an interest which produced what is now often called virtue ethics Wiseman Rachael 1 January 2015 Anscombe s Intention Jurisprudence 6 1 182 193 doi 10 5235 20403313 6 l 182 inactive 1 November 2024 ISSN 2040 3313 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of November 2024 link Stoutland Frederick 2011 Introduction Anscombe s Intention in Context Essays on Anscombe s Intention Anton Ford Jennifer Hornsby Frederick Stoutland Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press pp 1 22 doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674060913 intro ISBN 978 0 674 06091 3 OCLC 754715004 Singh Keshav 30 December 2020 Anscombe on Acting for Reasons In Chang Ruth Kurt Sylvan eds The Routledge Handbook of Practical Reason Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 33712 9 Teichman Jenny 2003 Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe 1919 2001 PDF In Thompson F M L ed Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 115 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows I British Academy doi 10 5871 bacad 9780197262788 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 175421 0 Teichman Jenny 2017 Anscombe Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret 1919 2001 philosopher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 75032 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Teichmann Roger 2008 Introduction The Philosophy of Elizabeth Anscombe Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 153845 2 OCLC 269285454 The philosophy examiners wanted to give her a First but the ancient history examiners would agree to this only on condition that she showed a minimum knowledge of their subject in a viva voce oral examination Anscombe s performance was less than spectacular To the last two questions she answered No these being Can you give us the name of a Roman provincial governor and in some desperation Is there any fact about the period you are supposed to have studied which you would like to tell us The examiners cannot have been well pleased but somehow or other ended up being persuaded by the philosophers As Michael Dummett writes in his obituary For the ancient historians to have yielded her philosophy papers must have been astonishing Drury M O C Maurice O Connor 21 September 2017 The selected writings of Maurice O Connor Drury on Wittgenstein philosophy religion and psychiatry Hayes John Professor of Philosophy London pp 407 409 ISBN 978 1 4742 5636 0 OCLC 946967786 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Monk Ray 1990 Ludwig Wittgenstein the duty of genius 1st American ed New York Free Press pp 497 498 ISBN 0 02 921670 2 OCLC 21560991 Driver Julia 2018 Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2018 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 19 June 2019 The Oxford Handbook of Wittgenstein Kuusela Oskari McGinn Marie Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 pp 715 fn 2 ISBN 978 0 19 928750 5 OCLC 764568769 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Michael L Coulter Richard S Myers Joseph A Varacalli 2012 Encyclopedia of Catholic Social Thought Social Science and Social Policy Supplement Vol 3 Scarecrow Press p 6 ISBN 9780810882751 Malcolm Norman 1967 Ludwig Wittgenstein A Memoir Oxford University Press p 97 Professor G E M Anscombe The Daily Telegraph 6 January 2001 ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2019 In the autumn of 1939 while still an undergraduate she and a friend wrote a pamphlet entitled The Justice of the Present War Examined In this Elizabeth Anscombe argued that while Britain was certainly fighting against an unjust cause it was not fighting for a just one Subsequently the Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham told the two students to withdraw the pamphlet because they had described it as Catholic without getting a Church licence Meyers Diana Tietjens 2008 Anscombe Elizabeth In Smith Bonnie G ed The Oxford encyclopedia of women in world history Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514890 9 OCLC 167505633 Anscombe opposed Britain s entry into World War II on the grounds that fighting the war would certainly involve killing non combatants When Oxford decided to award the U S president Harry Truman an honorary degree in 1956 Anscombe protested vigorously arguing that the atomic bombing of innocent civilians at Hiroshima and Nagasaki disqualified him for such an honour Elizabeth Anscombe de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture University of Notre Dame ethicscenter nd edu Retrieved 6 May 2019 Anscombe was a vigorous opponent of the use of nuclear weapons and led a protest of Oxford s awarding a degree to President Harry Truman on the grounds that a mass murderer should not be so honoured She was also a fierce opponent of abortion on one occasion late in her life she had to be dragged bodily by police away from a sit in at an abortion clinic Wiseman Rachael 2016 The Intended and Unintended Consequences of Intention PDF American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90 2 207 227 doi 10 5840 acpq201622982 Retrieved 17 June 2019 On 1st May 1956 Oxford University s Convocation considered nominations for honorary degrees One of the nominations was Harry S Truman Anscombe caused a small stir by arguing that the nomination should be rejected on the grounds that Truman was guilty of mass murder Anscombe s speech did not persuade The House was asked to indicate its attitude toward the nomination and showed overwhelming support On 20th June Truman was awarded his honorary degree Gormally L Kietzmann C Torralba J M Bibliography of Works by G E M Anscombe Seventh Version June 2012 The date in CP is 1957 and there is no date in the original pamphlet However according to the facts it must have been published in 1956 The Honorary Degree was conferred on June 20th 1956 and the Bodleian stamp of the pamphlet is 11 July 1956 See Torralba J M Accion intencional y razonamiento practico segun G E M Anscombe Pamplona Eunsa 2005 pp 58 61 G E M Anscombe Mr Truman s Degree 1956 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Rare Pics Surface of Elizabeth Anscombe Arrested for Blocking Abortion Clinic ChurchPOP 18 October 2016 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter A PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 19 April 2011 Rutler George W 1 September 2004 Cloud of Witnesses G E M Anscombe Crisis Magazine Retrieved 12 September 2024 Dolan John M 1 May 2001 G E M Anscombe Living the Truth First Things Retrieved 30 August 2024 Hayes John 2020 G E M ANSCOMBE Irish born philosopher History Ireland 28 5 42 44 ISSN 0791 8224 JSTOR 26934660 Frequently Asked Questions about C S Lewis Biblical Discernment Ministries 1999 Archived from the original on 24 October 2005 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Truth about Anscombe v C S Lewis The Telegraph 11 January 2001 Archived from the original on 24 March 2021 Retrieved 24 March 2021 when writing my C S Lewis a Companion and Guide 1996 Lewis told me in 1963 that he thought he won the debate with Anscombe at the Socratic Club in 1948 However he accepted that he had been unclear and revised Chapter III of the book Ironically many philosophers disagree with Anscombe s argument and maintain that the original chapter was philosophically sound and that Lewis did not need to rewrite it It is also not true that Lewis never again wrote straightforward polemics for Christianity In 1952 he revised his BBC wartime broadcasts as Mere Christianity That book has probably caused more people to accept the faith than any other philosophical tome of the last century Lewis was a man of such titanic imagination that he didn t need to go over and over the same ideas It was not fear of Anscombe or anyone else that caused him to write the seven incomparable Chronicles of Narnia in the 1950s Three theological works followed them Smilde Arend 6 December 2017 What Lewis really did to Miracles A philosophical layman s attempt to understand the Anscombe affair Journal of Inklings Studies 1 2 9 24 doi 10 3366 ink 2011 1 2 3 Anscombe G E M 1959 An Introduction to Wittgenstein s Tractatus London Hutchinson Wittgenstein Ludwig 1969 On Certainty Oxford BasilBlackwell Reply to a Parliamentary Question PDF in German Vienna p 521 Retrieved 21 October 2012 Anscombe 1957 sec 5 8 Anscombe 1957 sec 18 21 Anscombe G E M 1981 Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Mind collected papers vol 2 Oxford Basil Blackwell pp 21 36 ISBN 0 631 12932 4 Anscombe 1957 Searle John R 1983 Intentionality an essay in the philosophy of mind Cambridge Cambridgeshire Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22895 6 OCLC 9196773 Anscombe 1957 sec 32 Anscombe 1957 sec 48 Seidel Christian 2019 Consequentialism new directions new problems Oxford moral theory New York N Y Oxford university press pp 2 3 ISBN 978 0 19 027011 7 Haldane John 2000 In Memoriam G E M Anscombe 1919 2001 PDF The Review of Metaphysics 53 4 1019 1021 ISSN 0034 6632 Crisp Roger Slote Michael 1997 Introduction In Crisp Roger Slote Michael eds Virtue ethics Oxford Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 0 19 875189 3 OCLC 37028589 Home bioethics org uk Anscombe G E M 1958 On Brute Facts Analysis 18 3 69 72 doi 10 2307 3326788 JSTOR 3326788 Searle John 1995 The Construction of Social Reality London Allen Lane The Penguin Press pp 120 121 ISBN 0 14 023590 6 Wittgenstein Lugwig 1993 Notes for Lectures on Private Experience and Sense Data In Klagge J Nordmann A eds Philosophical Occasions Indianapolis Hackett p 228 Into the Coast Sebastian Rodl 10 January 2019 Anscombe G E M Causality and Determination Metaphysics edited by Jaegwon Kim Daniel Z Korman and Ernest Sosa Wiley Blackwell 2012 pp 386 396 Oppenheimer Mark 8 January 2011 Renaissance for Outspoken Catholic Philosopher The New York Times p A14 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Scruton Roger 2010 Wine and Philosophy Decanter Vol 35 pp 57 59 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Warnock Mary ed 1996 Women Philosophers London J M Dent amp Sons Ltd p 203 ISBN 0 460 87738 0 OCLC 34407377 the undoubted giant among women philosophers a writer of immense breadth authority and penetration Sources Anscombe 1957 Intention Oxford Blackwell 1957 Further reading Anscombe G E M 1975 The First Person In Guttenplan Samuel ed Mind and Language Oxford Clarendon Press Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 9 November 2017 1981 On Transubstantiation Ethics Religion and Politics The Collected Philosophical Papers of G E M Anscombe Vol 3 Oxford Blackwell pp 107 112 ISBN 978 0 631 12942 4 via Second Spring 1993 rev ed first published 1975 Contraception and Chastity rev ed PDF In Smith Janet E ed Why Humanae Vitae Was Right A Reader San Francisco Ignatius Press Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Doyle Bob G E M Anscombe The Information Philosopher Cambridge Massachusetts Retrieved 10 November 2017 Driver Julia 2014 Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford California Stanford University ISSN 1095 5054 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Gormally Luke 2011 G E M Anscombe 1919 2001 PDF Oxford Anscombe Bioethics Centre Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2021 Retrieved 9 November 2017 O Grady Jane 11 January 2011 Elizabeth Anscombe The Guardian London Retrieved 9 November 2017 Portrait of a Catholic Philosopher Oxford Anscombe Bioethics Centre Archived from the original on 21 January 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Mac Cumhaill Clare Wiseman Rachael 2022 Metaphysical animals how four women brought philosophy back to life London ISBN 978 0 385 54570 9 OCLC 1289274891 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Professor G E M Anscombe The Telegraph London 22 November 2001 Archived from the original on 7 April 2008 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Richter Duncan G E M Anscombe 1919 2001 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ISSN 2161 0002 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Rutler George W 2004 G E M Anscombe Cloud of Witnesses Crisis Vol 22 no 8 Washington Morley Publishing Group Archived from the original on 14 August 2007 Retrieved 9 November 2017 Teichman Jenny 2003 Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe 1919 2001 In Thompson F M L ed Biographical Memoirs of Fellows Volume 1 Proceedings of the British Academy Vol 115 Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 5871 bacad 9780197262788 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 726278 8 Torralba Jose M 2014 G E M Anscombe Bibliography Pamplona Spain University of Navarra Retrieved 10 November 2017 Wallgren Thomas H ed 2024 The Creation of Wittgenstein Understanding the Roles of Rush Rhees Elizabeth Anscombe and Georg Henrik von Wright Bloomsbury Publishing External links Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe 1919 2001 Teichman Jenny 2003 Proceedings of The British Academy 115 p 31 50 Great Thinkers Jane Heal FBA on Elizabeth Anscombe FBA British Academy blog podcast with Rachael Wiseman 13 May 2019 Portals BiographyCatholicismPhilosophyG E M Anscombe at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from CommonsQuotations from WikiquoteData from Wikidata