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Howison Lectures in Philosophy


The Howison Lectures in Philosophy are a lecture series established in 1919 by friends and former students of George Howison, who served as the Mills Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity at the University of California, Berkeley.

1922 — William Ernest Hocking — "Naturalism and the Belief in Purpose"; "Intuitionism and Idealism"; "Realism and Mysticism"

1923 — Arthur Oncken Lovejoy — "The Discontinuities of Evolution"

1925 — William Pepperell Montague — "Time and the Fourth Dimension"

1925 — Ralph Barton Perry — "A Modernist View of National Ideals"

1926 — Clarence Irving Lewis — "The Pragmatic Element in Knowledge"

1927 — Evander Bradley McGilvary — "Space and Time"

1929 — Robert Mark Wenley

1930 — James Hayden Tufts — "Recent Ethical Theories"

1931 — John Dewey — "Thought and Context"

1932 — Walter Goodnow Everett — "The Uniqueness of Man"

1933 — F. C. S. Schiller — "Theory and Practice"

1934 — G. Watts Cunningham — "Perspective and Contact in the Meaning Situation"

1935 — Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge — "An Approach to a Theory of Nature"

1936 — Henry W. Stuart — "Knowledge and Self-Consciousness"

1937 — Heinrich Gomperz — "Limits of Cognition and Exigencies of Action"

1941 — George Holland Sabine — "Social Studies and Objectivity"

1941 — George Edward Moore — "Certainty"


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