John Oulton Wisdom


John Oulton Wisdom, cousin of Cambridge professor John Wisdom was "an important contributor to philosophy and to psychoanalysis" who made "original contributions to the mind-body problem, to philosophy of science, to cybernetics, to the theory of psychosomatic disorder, and to psychoanalytic theory".

Life

Born in Dublin on 29 December 1908, J. O. Wisdom was the only child of Thomas Hume Wisdom, a brewery clerk, and his English-born wife Jane Oulton.
He was educated at Earlsfort House School, also attended by Samuel Beckett, and then at Trinity College Dublin, where he studied under the Hegelian scholar Henry Stewart Macran. Graduating in 1931, he continued postgraduate studies until 1933 when he received a doctoral degree for a thesis on Hegel.
Wisdom was then to move to Cambridge where he encountered the analytical philosophy of G.E. Moore and Ludwig Wittgenstein. His first teaching post was in Cairo, where he published The Metamorphosis of Philosophy in 1947. In 1948 he was appointed as a lecturer at the London School of Economics, before being appointed as a Reader in 1953, a position he retained until 1965. Wisdom also served as an editor of the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science from 1952 until 1963. In the mid-sixties Wisdom would move to North America, teaching at several US universities before finally moving to Canada and to a professorship in philosophy and social science at York University, Toronto, where he remained until his retirement in 1979.
He died at his home, Wilmont House, in Castlebridge, County Wexford, in 1993.

Works

For complete bibliographical details see "Publications by John Oulton Wisdom".