
Paul Weiss (/waɪs/; May 19, 1901 – July 5, 2002) was an American philosopher. He was the founder of The Review of Metaphysics and the Metaphysical Society of America.
Paul Weiss | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, US | May 19, 1901
Died | July 5, 2002 Washington, D.C., US | (aged 101)
Education | City College of New York (BA) Harvard University (PhD) |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Process philosophy |
Institutions | Yale University Catholic University of America |
Thesis | The Nature of Systems (1929) |
Doctoral advisor | Alfred North Whitehead |
Doctoral students | Alvin Plantinga Richard Rorty Robert Spitzer |
Main interests | Metaphysics |
Notable ideas | Being consists of a plurality of individuals that are unified by universality, which gives a structure to all there is |
Early life and education
Paul Weiss grew up on the Lower East Side of New York City. His father, Samuel Weiss (d. 1917), was a Jewish emigrant who moved from Europe in the 1890s. He worked as a tinsmith, a coppersmith, and a boilermaker. Paul Weiss's mother, Emma Rothschild (Weiss) (d. 1915), was a Jewish emigrant who worked as a servant until she married Samuel. Born into a Jewish family, Paul lived among other Jewish families in a working-class neighborhood in the Yorkville section of Manhattan. Originally given the Hebrew name "Peretz," Weiss says in his autobiography that the name "Paul" was his "registered name" and "part of his mother's attempt to move upward in the American world." He had three brothers, two older and one younger.
Weiss graduated from Public School #77. He later enrolled at the High School of Commerce where he learned shorthand and how to type; however, he felt that he did not benefit much from the available courses. His grades began to fall, and with a little encouragement from his mother, he eventually dropped out of high school. After working many odd jobs, Weiss enrolled at the College of the City of New York in 1924. He took free night classes in philosophy, graduating cum laude in 1927. At the College of the City of New York, he studied with Morris R. Cohen, who awakened in him an interest in the American pragmatist and logician Charles Sanders Peirce. During this period he also met Victoria Brodkin (d. 1953), whom he would later marry on October 27, 1928. They had two children: Judith, who was born in 1935, and Jonathan, who was born in 1939.
Upon receiving his B.A. from the City College of New York, Weiss immediately enrolled at Harvard, where he studied philosophy under Étienne Gilson, William Ernest Hocking, C. I. Lewis, Ralph Barton Perry, and Alfred North Whitehead. Under the direction of Whitehead, Weiss went on to receive his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1929.
Weiss's first semester at Harvard proved to be a busy one. He volunteered to help Charles Hartshorne in the monumental task of editing the thousands of scattered pages Charles S. Peirce had left behind for publication by Harvard University Press. C. I. Lewis, who was at the time the department chair of philosophy at Harvard, eventually approved Weiss to work alongside Hartshorne for the remainder of the project. The first six volumes of Peirce's work would eventually be published between 1931 and 1935. Weiss was mainly responsible for the second, third, and fourth volumes. Two more volumes, both edited by Arthur Burks, would later appear in the 1950s.
Teaching
In 1931 Paul Weiss left Harvard and began teaching philosophy at Bryn Mawr. As Weiss explains, Bryn Mawr was at the time "the self-chosen destination of the most intellectual, intelligent, determined, and well-prepared young women in America." Some fifteen years later in 1946, Weiss was invited to teach at Yale for a term as a substitute for Brand Blanshard. He accepted and what began as a temporary job turned into a permanent position that lasted for twenty four years. He comments that his experience at Yale was quite different from Bryn Mawr. "I was there faced with men—no women were enrolled in the undergraduate school until more than two decades later—many of whom had just returned from military service. They were older, some having gone through searing experiences, no longer enjoying the cozy atmosphere of their preparatory schools. I seemed to be just the teacher they needed and wanted." Weiss remained at Yale until 1969 when he reached Yale's mandatory retirement age. Shortly after, he was offered the Schweitzer Chair of philosophy at Fordham University, but the offer was quickly retracted, allegedly due to Weiss's age. Weiss challenged Fordham's decision in an age discrimination lawsuit, but in the end he lost. In the early 1970s, Weiss began teaching at the Catholic University of America. In 1992 Weiss's contract with the university was not renewed. Again he felt that age discrimination played a role in the university's decision. Weiss and his son Jonathan, a lawyer and director of Legal Services for the Elderly in New York, challenged the Catholic University of America's decision. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigated the case and eventually ruled in Weiss's favor. His contract with the Catholic University of America was renewed until 1994 when Weiss voluntarily retired.
Philosophical work
Weiss was responsible for founding the scholarly journal The Review of Metaphysics in 1947. He also went on to found a notable philosophical organization, the Metaphysical Society of America, in 1950.
Among his philosophical works, Weiss is mainly known for his metaphysical writings, such as Being and Other Realities. His other works include books and articles in epistemology and cosmology. He even published eleven volumes under the title Philosophy in Process, detailing his continuing and sometimes daily reflections over the years 1955–1987. A recurring point in Weiss's philosophy is the claim that Being consists of a plurality of individuals that are unified by universality, which gives a structure to all there is, but that it is also irreducible in four distinct ways. During his prime, Weiss maintained a style of philosophy that was considered by many to be out-of-date. Weiss was opposed to various philosophies that were popular at the time, including that of the analytics, that of the logical positivists, and that of the Marxists. His was a philosophy which engaged in grand-scale philosophical system-building, much in the style of Kant, Hegel, or Peirce.
As a philosopher, Weiss's students reported that he could be "fierce in argument" while maintaining "gentleness" and "personal regard for his students." John Silber, one of Weiss's former students, said of him, "In order to study philosophy with Paul, one had to philosophize. And Paul's dialectical powers gave credence to Plato's account of those powers exercised by Socrates himself."
Death
Weiss died in 2002 at the age of 101. His final book, Surrogates, was published shortly after his death. Most of Weiss's papers were donated to the Morris Library at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. After his death, his remaining papers and his extensive library (and also the legal papers, French and Russian translations, novels, and other non-fiction books of his son) were bequeathed to the Institute for American Thought housed at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) and the IUPUI University Library.
In popular media
In a June 13, 1968, guest appearance on the nationally televised The Dick Cavett Show, Weiss argued that fellow guest James Baldwin was excessively focused on the Black experience. The exchange was featured in Raoul Peck's documentary I Am Not Your Negro, and described by media reviewer A. O. Scott: the "initial spectacle of mediocrity condescending to genius is painful, but the subsequent triumph of [Baldwin's] self-taught brilliance over credentialed ignorance is thrilling to witness".
Bibliography
- Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 1: Principles of Philosophy (co-editor). Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University Press. 1931.
- Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 2: Elements of Logic (editor). Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University Press. 1932.
- Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 3: Exact Logic (editor). Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University Press. 1933.
- Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 4: The Simplest Mathematics (editor). Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University Press. 1934.
- Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 5: Pragmatism and Pragmaticism (co-editor). Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University Press. 1935.
- Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vol. 6: Scientific Metaphysics (co-editor). Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University Press. 1935.
- Reality. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press. 1938.
- Nature and Man. New York: Henry Holt & Co. 1947.
- Man's Freedom. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1950.
- Modes of Being. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1958.
- Our Public Life. Bloomington, Indiana University Press.1959.
- Nine Basic Arts. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press.1961.
- The World of Art. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press. 1961.
- History: Written and Lived. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press. 1962.
- The God We Seek. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press.1964.
- The Making of Men. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press. 1967.
- Right & Wrong: A Philosophical Dialogue Between Father and Son. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press 1967.
- Sport: A Philosophical Inquiry (1969),
- Beyond All Appearances. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1974.
- Cinematics. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1975.
- First Considerations. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1977.
- You, I, and the Others. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1980.
- Privacy. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1983.
- Toward A Perfected State. Albany (N.Y.), State University of New York Press, 1986.
- Creativity and Common Sense: Essays in Honor of Paul Weiss. Albany (N.Y.), State University of New York Press, 1987.
- Philosophy in Process, Vol. 1–11. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press. 1966–1989.
- Creative Ventures. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1992.
- Being and Other Realities. Chicago, Open Court Publishing Co. 1995.
- Emphatics. Nashville, Vanderbilt University Press, 2000.
- Surrogates. Bloomington (IN), Indiana University Press, 2002.
See also
- American philosophy
- List of American philosophers
References
- Weiss, Paul. The Philosophy of Paul Weiss. Ed. Lewis Hahn. Chicago : Open Court, 1995.
- Castiglione, Robert L. "Paul Weiss (1901–2002). Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers Vol. 4. Ed. Shook. England. Thoemmes. 2005.
- Weiss, Paul. "Lost in Thought: Alone with Others." The Library of Living Philosophers Vol. 23: The Philosophy of Paul Weiss. Ed. L.E. Hahn. Chicago. Open Court. 1995.
- Kennedy, Kevin. "Paul Weiss's method(s) and system(s)." The Review of Metaphysics. Vol. 50. No. 1. (Sept. 1996).
- Silber, John. "In Memoriam: Paul Weiss (1901–2002)." The Review of Metaphysics. Vol. 56. No. 1. (Sep. 2002), pp. 253–254.
- "The Dick Cavett Show - Season 1, Episode 74: June 13, 1968 - TV.com". www.tv.com. Archived from the original on May 5, 2016.
- Scott, A.O. "Review: 'I Am Not Your Negro' Will Make You Rethink Race", New York Times, 2/2/2017
- Langford, C. H. (1936). "Review: Collected Papers of Charles Peirce, Vol. III, Exact Logic, and Vol. IV, The Simplest Mathematics, ed. by Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 42 (11): 795. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1936-06439-6.
External links
- Institute for American Thought
- Review of Metaphysics
- Metaphysical Society of America
- Yale University.
- New York Times obituary[usurped]
- Paul Weiss Papers at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Special Collections Research Center
Paul Weiss w aɪ s May 19 1901 July 5 2002 was an American philosopher He was the founder of The Review of Metaphysics and the Metaphysical Society of America Paul WeissBorn 1901 05 19 May 19 1901 New York City USDiedJuly 5 2002 2002 07 05 aged 101 Washington D C USEducationCity College of New York BA Harvard University PhD Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolProcess philosophyInstitutionsYale University Catholic University of AmericaThesisThe Nature of Systems 1929 Doctoral advisorAlfred North WhiteheadDoctoral studentsAlvin Plantinga Richard Rorty Robert SpitzerMain interestsMetaphysicsNotable ideasBeing consists of a plurality of individuals that are unified by universality which gives a structure to all there isEarly life and educationPaul Weiss grew up on the Lower East Side of New York City His father Samuel Weiss d 1917 was a Jewish emigrant who moved from Europe in the 1890s He worked as a tinsmith a coppersmith and a boilermaker Paul Weiss s mother Emma Rothschild Weiss d 1915 was a Jewish emigrant who worked as a servant until she married Samuel Born into a Jewish family Paul lived among other Jewish families in a working class neighborhood in the Yorkville section of Manhattan Originally given the Hebrew name Peretz Weiss says in his autobiography that the name Paul was his registered name and part of his mother s attempt to move upward in the American world He had three brothers two older and one younger Weiss graduated from Public School 77 He later enrolled at the High School of Commerce where he learned shorthand and how to type however he felt that he did not benefit much from the available courses His grades began to fall and with a little encouragement from his mother he eventually dropped out of high school After working many odd jobs Weiss enrolled at the College of the City of New York in 1924 He took free night classes in philosophy graduating cum laude in 1927 At the College of the City of New York he studied with Morris R Cohen who awakened in him an interest in the American pragmatist and logician Charles Sanders Peirce During this period he also met Victoria Brodkin d 1953 whom he would later marry on October 27 1928 They had two children Judith who was born in 1935 and Jonathan who was born in 1939 Upon receiving his B A from the City College of New York Weiss immediately enrolled at Harvard where he studied philosophy under Etienne Gilson William Ernest Hocking C I Lewis Ralph Barton Perry and Alfred North Whitehead Under the direction of Whitehead Weiss went on to receive his Ph D from Harvard in 1929 Weiss s first semester at Harvard proved to be a busy one He volunteered to help Charles Hartshorne in the monumental task of editing the thousands of scattered pages Charles S Peirce had left behind for publication by Harvard University Press C I Lewis who was at the time the department chair of philosophy at Harvard eventually approved Weiss to work alongside Hartshorne for the remainder of the project The first six volumes of Peirce s work would eventually be published between 1931 and 1935 Weiss was mainly responsible for the second third and fourth volumes Two more volumes both edited by Arthur Burks would later appear in the 1950s TeachingIn 1931 Paul Weiss left Harvard and began teaching philosophy at Bryn Mawr As Weiss explains Bryn Mawr was at the time the self chosen destination of the most intellectual intelligent determined and well prepared young women in America Some fifteen years later in 1946 Weiss was invited to teach at Yale for a term as a substitute for Brand Blanshard He accepted and what began as a temporary job turned into a permanent position that lasted for twenty four years He comments that his experience at Yale was quite different from Bryn Mawr I was there faced with men no women were enrolled in the undergraduate school until more than two decades later many of whom had just returned from military service They were older some having gone through searing experiences no longer enjoying the cozy atmosphere of their preparatory schools I seemed to be just the teacher they needed and wanted Weiss remained at Yale until 1969 when he reached Yale s mandatory retirement age Shortly after he was offered the Schweitzer Chair of philosophy at Fordham University but the offer was quickly retracted allegedly due to Weiss s age Weiss challenged Fordham s decision in an age discrimination lawsuit but in the end he lost In the early 1970s Weiss began teaching at the Catholic University of America In 1992 Weiss s contract with the university was not renewed Again he felt that age discrimination played a role in the university s decision Weiss and his son Jonathan a lawyer and director of Legal Services for the Elderly in New York challenged the Catholic University of America s decision The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigated the case and eventually ruled in Weiss s favor His contract with the Catholic University of America was renewed until 1994 when Weiss voluntarily retired Philosophical workWeiss was responsible for founding the scholarly journal The Review of Metaphysics in 1947 He also went on to found a notable philosophical organization the Metaphysical Society of America in 1950 Among his philosophical works Weiss is mainly known for his metaphysical writings such as Being and Other Realities His other works include books and articles in epistemology and cosmology He even published eleven volumes under the title Philosophy in Process detailing his continuing and sometimes daily reflections over the years 1955 1987 A recurring point in Weiss s philosophy is the claim that Being consists of a plurality of individuals that are unified by universality which gives a structure to all there is but that it is also irreducible in four distinct ways During his prime Weiss maintained a style of philosophy that was considered by many to be out of date Weiss was opposed to various philosophies that were popular at the time including that of the analytics that of the logical positivists and that of the Marxists His was a philosophy which engaged in grand scale philosophical system building much in the style of Kant Hegel or Peirce As a philosopher Weiss s students reported that he could be fierce in argument while maintaining gentleness and personal regard for his students John Silber one of Weiss s former students said of him In order to study philosophy with Paul one had to philosophize And Paul s dialectical powers gave credence to Plato s account of those powers exercised by Socrates himself DeathWeiss died in 2002 at the age of 101 His final book Surrogates was published shortly after his death Most of Weiss s papers were donated to the Morris Library at Southern Illinois University Carbondale After his death his remaining papers and his extensive library and also the legal papers French and Russian translations novels and other non fiction books of his son were bequeathed to the Institute for American Thought housed at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis IUPUI and the IUPUI University Library In popular mediaIn a June 13 1968 guest appearance on the nationally televised The Dick Cavett Show Weiss argued that fellow guest James Baldwin was excessively focused on the Black experience The exchange was featured in Raoul Peck s documentary I Am Not Your Negro and described by media reviewer A O Scott the initial spectacle of mediocrity condescending to genius is painful but the subsequent triumph of Baldwin s self taught brilliance over credentialed ignorance is thrilling to witness BibliographyCollected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce vol 1 Principles of Philosophy co editor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1931 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce vol 2 Elements of Logic editor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1932 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce vol 3 Exact Logic editor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1933 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce vol 4 The Simplest Mathematics editor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1934 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce vol 5 Pragmatism and Pragmaticism co editor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1935 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce vol 6 Scientific Metaphysics co editor Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1935 Reality Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1938 Nature and Man New York Henry Holt amp Co 1947 Man s Freedom New Haven Yale University Press 1950 Modes of Being Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1958 Our Public Life Bloomington Indiana University Press 1959 Nine Basic Arts Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1961 The World of Art Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1961 History Written and Lived Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1962 The God We Seek Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1964 The Making of Men Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1967 Right amp Wrong A Philosophical Dialogue Between Father and Son Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1967 Sport A Philosophical Inquiry 1969 Beyond All Appearances Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1974 Cinematics Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1975 First Considerations Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1977 You I and the Others Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1980 Privacy Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1983 Toward A Perfected State Albany N Y State University of New York Press 1986 Creativity and Common Sense Essays in Honor of Paul Weiss Albany N Y State University of New York Press 1987 Philosophy in Process Vol 1 11 Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1966 1989 Creative Ventures Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 1992 Being and Other Realities Chicago Open Court Publishing Co 1995 Emphatics Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 2000 Surrogates Bloomington IN Indiana University Press 2002 See alsoAmerican philosophy List of American philosophersReferencesWeiss Paul The Philosophy of Paul Weiss Ed Lewis Hahn Chicago Open Court 1995 Castiglione Robert L Paul Weiss 1901 2002 Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers Vol 4 Ed Shook England Thoemmes 2005 Weiss Paul Lost in Thought Alone with Others The Library of Living Philosophers Vol 23 The Philosophy of Paul Weiss Ed L E Hahn Chicago Open Court 1995 Kennedy Kevin Paul Weiss s method s and system s The Review of Metaphysics Vol 50 No 1 Sept 1996 Silber John In Memoriam Paul Weiss 1901 2002 The Review of Metaphysics Vol 56 No 1 Sep 2002 pp 253 254 The Dick Cavett Show Season 1 Episode 74 June 13 1968 TV com www tv com Archived from the original on May 5 2016 Scott A O Review I Am Not Your Negro Will Make You Rethink Race New York Times 2 2 2017 Langford C H 1936 Review Collected Papers of Charles Peirce Vol III Exact Logic and Vol IV The Simplest Mathematics ed by Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 42 11 795 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1936 06439 6 External linksInstitute for American Thought Review of Metaphysics Metaphysical Society of America Yale University New York Times obituary usurped Paul Weiss Papers at Southern Illinois University Carbondale Special Collections Research Center