L. Gordon Graham
Gordon Graham is Chair of the Edinburgh Sacred Arts Foundation, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and the Arts at Princeton Theological Seminary in the USA, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Scotland's premier academy of science and letters.
Education and career
Born in Ireland and educated in Ireland, Scotland and England, he taught philosophy in Scotland at the University of St Andrews. He was Regius Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Aberdeen before taking up his post as Henry Luce III Professor of Philosophy and the Arts at Princeton Theological Seminary. He has published extensively on a wide range of philosophical topics relating to art, education, ethics, politics, religion, and technology. He has a special interest in the Scottish philosophical tradition, and was founding Editor of the Journal of Scottish Philosophy. From 2007 to 2018, he was Director the Center for the Study of Scottish Philosophy at Princeton, and on his retirement was honoured with the 'Life Time Achievement Award' of the Eighteenth Century Scottish Studies Society. From 2008 to 2015 he was Director of The Abraham Kuyper Center for Public Theology.An Anglican priest ordained in the Scottish Episcopal Church, he was licensed in the Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey from 2007 to 2018, and now holds a warrant in the Diocese of Edinburgh. In 1990 he was Sheffer Visiting Professor of Religion at The Colorado College, and in 2004 Stanton Lecturer in Philosophy and Religion at the University of Cambridge.
Gordon Graham was Director of the St Andrews University Music Centre from 1991 to 1995, taught as an adjunct professor of Sacred Music at the Westminster Choir College in 2010–12, and since 2018 has directed the Edinburgh Festival of the Sacred Arts in the Fringe. He has written several texts for hymns and anthems. Two, set to music by the composer Paul Mealor – Lux benigna' and 'Anthem to St David' – have been published by Novello.
In 2019, the Institute for the Study of Scottish Philosophy announced the Gordon Graham Prize in Scottish Philosophy. The winner of the competition was Enrico Galvagni, whose paper was published in the Journal of Scottish Philosophy.
Books
David Hume and the Aberdeen PhilosophersThe Hope of the Poor: philosophy, religion and economic development
Scottish Philosophy After the Enlightenment
Philosophy, Art and Religion: understanding faith and creativity
Wittgenstein and Natural Religion
The Re-enchantment of the World: art versus religion
Theories of Ethics
Ethics and International Relations 2nd revised edition,
Universities: the recovery of an idea 2nd revised edition.
The Case Against the Democratic State Exeter:
Genes: a philosophical inquiry, Translations: Portuguese
Philosophy of the Arts 3rd revised edition, 1st edition 1997, 2nd edition 2001 Translations: Portuguese ; Hungarian ; Serbian Russian ; Persian
The Internet: a philosophical inquiry, Translations: Dutch ; Spanish ; Greek ; Korean
Evil and Christian Ethics
The Shape of the Past: a philosophical approach to history,
Living the Good Life: an introduction to moral philosophy,
The Idea of Christian Charity: a critique of some contemporary conceptions
Contemporary Social Philosophy, Translations: Italian ; Chinese
Politics in its Place: a study of six ideologies,
Historical Explanation Reconsidered, Scots Philosophical Monographs No.4