Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Thomas Dewar ('Harry') Weldon

In WWII, philosopher T. D. Weldon was Sir Arthur ('Bomber') Harris' assistant in Bomber Command. He helped Harris formulate the arguments and draft the documents that would promote the program of area bombing. Weldon was also a philosophy tutor in Magdalen College at Oxford University.

My interest in Weldon was piqued by C. S. Lewis' description of him. Lewis and Weldon were colleagues at Magdalen. They seem not to have been fond of each other. Here's some of what Lewis has to say about Weldon:
...determined to be a villain. ... a frequent and loud laugher .... carries a great deal of liquor without being drunk. ... He is insolent by custom to servants and to old men .... He has great abilities, but would despise himself if he wasted them on disinterested undertakings. He gives no quarter and would ask none. He believes that he has seen through everything and lives at rock bottom. ... Contempt is his ruling passion: courage his chief virtue. (Lewis, All My Road Before Me: The Diary of C. S. Lewis, 1922-1927, ed. Walter Hooper [Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1991], pp. 482-3)
Lewis modeled a fictional character partly on Weldon in two scifi novels, Out of the Silent Planet and That Hideous Strength. The character in question is Dick Devine (aka Lord Feverstone), who is supposed to reflect Weldon's atheism and rationalism (in the loose and popular sense).

Before teaching at Oxford, Weldon served on the western front in WWI. He joined the Royal Field Artillery in France in 1915. From humble beginnings, Weldon was promoted to the rank of 'acting captain' ('Weldon, Thomas Dewar (1896–1958),' Mark J. Schofield in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, ed. Lawrence Goldman [Oxford: OUP, 2004[). He was wounded and awarded 'the Military Cross and bar' (Ibid.). According to R. W. Johnson, 'Those familiar with the mores of the British Army will recognize that this meant that he was quite insanely brave and clearly on the verge of a Victoria Cross' (Johnson, 'Exploring the Secret Garden', chap. 4 in Look Back in Laughter: Oxford's Postwar Golden Age [Newbury, UK: Threshold Press, 2015])

Weldon was a philosophy tutor at Magdalen College from 1922 until his death in 1958. He was known to have a good rapport with his students. According to the entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, he was 'not only accessible but also hospitable to his students, rewarding their efforts with a glass of sherry or a tankard of beer.' ('Weldon', Schofield, ODNB) (Weldon was a drinker. Another student, Robert Paul Wolff, recounts a discussion with a 'clearly inebriated' Weldon.) One of Weldon's more well known students was John ('Jack') Frederick Wolfenden, Baron Wolfenden of the Wolfenden Report. Weldon was the godfather of Baron Wolfenden's son, the brilliant, tragic journalist and spy Jeremy Wolfenden. (Incidentally, in his biography of Wolfenden (the younger), Sebastian Faulks says that Weldon took the nickname 'Harry' from a 'music-hall comedian' (Faulks, The Fatal Englishman: Three Short Lives, [NY: Vintage, 2002], p. 212).)

In WWII,  Weldon worked in the civil service from 1939 until 1942, at which time he became Sir Arthur Harris' Personal Staff Officer at Bomber Command. ('Weldon', Schofield, ODNB) Wing Commander Weldon was tasked with defending Bomber Harris' program of bombing German cities. The program had been challenged by a Cabinet Minister and Christian socialist, Sir Stafford Cripps. On Dec. 8, 1944, Cripps gave a lecture at Bomber Command Headquarters, in which he condemned area bombing as a decidedly un-Christian thing to do. Harris wasn't there, but the officers who attended the lecture were quite put out. In response, Harris had Weldon give a lecture the following night in defense of area bombing. (Jonathan Glover, Humanity: a Moral History of the Twentieth Century [New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001], p. 86) In his lecture, 'The Ethics of Bombing', Weldon denied that area bombing was terrorism, arguing that its purpose was to save lives by shortening the war. (My information about Weldon's lecture is drawn from Glover's above-cited book and from David I. Hall, '“Black, White and Grey”: Wartime Arguments for and against the Strategic Bomber Offensive', Canadian Military History 7 [1998]: 7-19). Among Weldon's critics at the time was the Rev. John Collins, the Anglican chaplain at Bomber Command who referred to Weldon's talk as the 'bombing of ethics' (and who would later be instrumental in forming the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament). (C. S. Lewis also was opposed to Harris' policy.)

It's odd that Weldon should have resorted to such a rationale, for he appears to have been a Kantian. A. J. Ayer characterized him as such. Actually, what Ayer says (in the course of explaining why neither he nor J. L. Austin won the John Locke Prize in 1933) is that Weldon was 'a Fellow of Magdalen, who was later to become an inflexible linguistic philosopher but was then an orthodox Kantian'. (Ayer, Part of My Life [London: Collins, 1977], p. 152) So, Weldon was an orthodox Kantian in 1933 but might not have been by the time WWII rolled around. Also, while Weldon was in some sense a Kantian, I don't know if he ever endorsed Kantian ethics.

There's a consensus among those who have written about him that Weldon was psychologically maimed by his battle-field experience in WWI. This comes through in C. S. Lewis' characterization of Weldon (as one who had the air of having 'seen through everything and [who] lived at rock bottom') as well as in a note about Weldon by a former student (Canadian-born Anthony King). R. W. Johnson says that Weldon 'was a man of steel who, in both wars, had had to face appalling situations and ultimate questions'. (Johnson, Ibid) Perhaps, then, Weldon's willingness to advocate area bombing was a case of brutalized (in WWI) and brutalizing (in WWII). Kantian and other alternatives to utilitarianism were fine for discussions at Magdalen College, but in the horrifying world of 20th-century warfare, it's massacre or be massacred.The anger, the drinking, talk of a suicide (though that's disputed)* -- today, Weldon would be in treatment for PTSD. In his day, he was wheeled out as a mouthpiece for the designers of terror bombing.

A few more notes about Weldon:

His Introduction to Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1945) was enlarged and republished 1958 under a shortened title (Kant's Critique of Pure Reason). R. G. Collingwood (for whom Weldon had been a teaching assistant) appears to have refereed the 1945 version of Weldon's Kant book -- at least, he expressed approval for the text in a letter that he wrote to Clarendon Press in 1939 (Nov. 17), where Collingwood wrote that the book 'tackles the subject in the one and only right way, i.e. as an historical subject'. (R. G. Collingwood: A Research Companion, James Connelly, Peter Johnson, and Stephen Leach [London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015], p. 90)

Weldon was active in the administration of Magdalen. Margaret Simons reports that he 'was, according to his biographers, responsible not only for forming the Modern Greats curriculum, but also for transforming Magdalen from an easygoing place, in which wealth and family position were key selection criteria, to an academic meritocracy'.

On Weldon's death, Ayer says that Gilbert Ryle had intended to drive to Venice with 'his friend Harry Weldon' to attend the 12th International Congress of Philosophy in 1958, but Weldon died, and Ryle invited Ayer 'to take his [Weldon's] place'. (Ayer, More of My Life [London: Collins, 1984], p. 157)

*The official cause of death was a brain hemorrhage.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Three mistakes in a recent book on Einstein and Bergson

I've seen few philosophical works on the books-of-the-year lists. One of the few is The Physicist and the Philosopher by Jimena Canales. The focus of the book is a dispute between Einstein and Bergson about the nature of time.

I've just bought the book and haven't had time, yet, to read it. However, after skimming some pages I've found three mistakes.

First, on p. 183, Canales says that 'Einstein admired Eddington for refusing to fight during World War I and liked Bertrand Russell, who had been imprisoned for refusing to join the army, for similar reasons'. In fact, Russell was fined in 1916 for writing an anti-war pamphlet, and was imprisoned for six months at the end of the war because he had written that American troops in the UK might be used for breaking strikes.

Secondly, on p. 204, Canales writes that Jacques Maritain 'helped craft' the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. However, the Charter was written after public consultations in 1980 and came into effect in 1982. Maritain died in 1973. I can find no evidence that Maritain contributed to Canada's earlier Bill of Rights (1960).

Thirdly, on p. 205, Canales reports that 'Maritain is known for having coined the word "scientism".' In fact, he isn't known for having coined the word, since it was being used before he used it (in 1910).

Update (Dec. 16): A colleague has informed me that Canales' book is longer than it needs to be (i.e., could do with a good edit) but is worth a read.

Monday, December 14, 2015

A third round of philosophy links

(3rd of 3 link lists posted between Dec. 12 & 14)

Mary Beard is interviewed about SPQR (her book about ancient Rome that's on many books-of-the-year lists).

Kimberly Ferzan (Law, UVA) reviews Dana Kay Nelkin's 2015 article, 'Psychopaths, Incorrigible Racists, and the Faces of Responsibility' (published in Ethics).

Frank Richardson reviews William H. Gass's collection of stories, Eyes

Udi Greenberg reviews Walter Benjamin: A Critical Life (by Michael Jennings and Howard Eiland).

From last April, a C-Span interview about Frantz Fanon with Lewis Gordon, co-author of What Fanon Said: A Philosophical Introduction to His Life and Thought.

Michaël Foessel and Jürgen Habermas discuss 'critique and communication'.

Tim Black on Raymond Tallis' book The Black Mirror: Fragments of an Obituary for Life.

Excerpt from George Musser's Spooky Action at a Distance:
When the philosopher Jenann Ismael was ten years old, her father, an Iraqi-born professor at the University of Calgary, bought a big wooden cabinet at an auction. Rummaging through it, she came across an old kaleidoscope, and she was entranced....Decades later, while preparing a talk on quantum physics, Ismael thought back to the kaleidoscope and went out to buy a fancy new one, a shiny copper tube in a velvet case. It was, she realized, a metaphor for non locality in physics.
Marcelo Gleiser, 'Could All Really Come From Nothing?'

By the developer of 'Social Contact, a digital simulation of political philosophy':
This article aims to expose the inherently political aspect of game development. By taking the particular topic of political philosophy of the Enlightenment, I hope to show how computer simulations can help us in acknowledging the politics in designing and developing games.
Simone de Beauvoir is the topic of this BBC discussion hosted by Melvyn Bragg (with Christina Howells, Margaret Atack, and Ursula Tidd).

Iris Murdoch was a Tolkien fan.

Rowan Williams on 'What Orwell can teach us about the language of terror and war'.


Saturday, December 12, 2015

More philosophy links (several book reviews included)

(2nd of 3 link lists posted between Dec. 12 & 14)

Andy West in the Guardian: 'Philosophy saved me from poverty and drugs: that’s why I teach it to kids.'
Research by the Institute of Education has shown that a term of philosophy sessions improved the reading skills of children on free school meals when compared to a control group. If philosophy is made more available to working-class children, then stories like mine won’t seem so unusual. 
Todd Cronan reviews The Challenge of Surrealism: The Correspondence of Theodor W. Adorno and Elisabeth Lenk.
 
David Beer reviews Walter Benjamin's Archive.

Robert Pippin reviews On Kantian Metaphysics (by R. Lanier Anderson).

Namara Smith reviews Kamel Daoud's The Meursault Investigation, 'a retelling of The Stranger from the perspective of its nameless victim’s brother ... an indictment of his predecessor and an appropriation of his legacy'. Robin Yassin-Kassab's Guardian review of the same book.

Excerpt from Tim Whitmarsh's Battling the Gods (on Plato and ancient atheists).

On YouTube, Thomas Nagel's Dewey Lecture.

Video from Howard Becker's 2014 Erving Goffman Memorial Lecture, called ‘"Chicago, 1950, Another Look" ... about his and Goffman’s time at the Chicago Sociology' department.

At H-Net:
    Chris Blakley reviews David Knight's Voyaging in Strange Seas: The Great Revolution in Science.

    Alexander Kaye reviews Judaism, Liberalism, and Political Theology, a collection of papers about the views of 'Spinoza, Hermann Cohen, Leo Strauss, Hannah Arendt, Walter Benjamin, Martin Buber, Franz Rosenzweig, and Sigmund Freud', etc.

    Michah Gottlieb reviews Benjamin Pollock's Franz Rosenzweig's Conversions: World Denial and World Redemption.

'Cynthia Robinson, a founding member for Sly and the Family Stone who played trumpet, has died after a battle with cancer.'



More.

Six philosophy links

(1st of 3 link lists posted between Dec. 12 & 14)

The first issue of Argumenta has articles by Brandom, Audi, Hochberg, Hacker, and Kriegel.

Announcement of  Nora Hämäläinen's new book, Literature and Moral Theory.

Audio and video of Steven E. Hyman's 2015 Loebel Lectures in Psychiatry and Philosophy (Oxford).

A first draft of a new deciphering of Carnap's diaries (to 1935, in German) by Brigitta Arden and Brigitte Parakenings, who are working for Christian Damböck's project, via the Carnap blog.

Elijah Millgram in Aeon: 'Orwell taught us to fear technocratic jargon that doesn’t let us say what we mean. But that is language at its best.'

Via the Sociological Imagination:
    Sadia Habib reviews Michel Foucault’s 1981 Louvain lecture series ‘Wrong-Doing, Truth-Telling’.
    Mark Carrigan on the 'culture of competitive sleep deprivation'.

Via Political Theory - Habermas and Rawls:
     Jonathan White's 'The Riptide of Technocracy: Can there be a democratic EU?'
     Jeremy Waldron's 'The Vanishing Europe of Jurgen Habermas'