Difference between revisions of "Moral Philosophy"
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== Other People == | == Other People == | ||
− | David Hume: a student at the University between 1722 and 1726, he was passed over for the Chair of Ethical and Pneumatical Philosophy (Moral Philosophy), in 1745, on grounds of atheism. | + | [[David Hume (1711-1776)]]: a student at the University between 1722 and 1726, he was passed over for the Chair of Ethical and Pneumatical Philosophy (Moral Philosophy), in 1745, on grounds of atheism. |
Adam Smith | Adam Smith | ||
− | George Elder Davie (1912–2007) | + | [[George Elder Davie (1912–2007)]] |
[[Category:Incomplete]] | [[Category:Incomplete]] |
Revision as of 22:04, 8 June 2014
The Chair of Moral Philosophy formed part of the Faculty of Arts when it was established as a distinct entity in 1708. The first Professor, William Law, had previously been one of the Regents.
Professors of Moral Philosophy
Chair of Moral Philosophy
William Law, 1708-
William Scott, Secundus, 1729-
John Pringle, 1734-
William Cleghorn, 1745-
James Balfour, 1754-
Adam Ferguson, 1764-
Dugald Stewart, 1785-
Thomas Brown, 1810-
John Wilson, 1820
Patrick Campbell MacDougall, 1853-
Henry Calderwood, 1868
James Seth, 1898
Alfred Edward Taylor, 1924-1941
John Macmurray, 1944-1957
Winston Herbert Frederick Barnes, 1959 -
Harry Burrows Acton, 1964-1973
Ronald Hepburn, 1975-1996
Rae Langton, 1999-2004
Other People
David Hume (1711-1776): a student at the University between 1722 and 1726, he was passed over for the Chair of Ethical and Pneumatical Philosophy (Moral Philosophy), in 1745, on grounds of atheism.
Adam Smith