Mortimer J. Adler
Mortimer Jerome Adler was an American philosopher, educator, encyclopedist, author, and lay theologian. His philosophical work was situated within the Aristotelian and Thomistic traditions. Adler taught at Columbia University and the University of Chicago, served as chairman of the board of editors of Encyclopædia Britannica, and founded the Institute for Philosophical Research.
He resided for extended periods in New York City, Chicago, San Francisco, and San Mateo, California.
Biography
Early life and education
Adler was born in Manhattan, New York City, on December 28, 1902, to Jewish immigrants from Germany: Clarissa, a schoolteacher, and Ignatz Adler, a jewelry salesman.Adler left school at age 14 to work as a copy boy for The New York Sun, with the ultimate aspiration of becoming a journalist. He soon returned to education to take night classes in writing, during which he became acquainted with Western philosophy.
Adler subsequently studied at Columbia University, where he contributed to the student literary magazine The Morningside. One of his contributions was the poem Choice, published in 1922, when Charles A. Wagner was editor-in-chief and Whittaker Chambers was an associate editor. Adler refused to take a swimming test required for a bachelor’s degree; Columbia awarded him an honorary degree in 1983. He remained at Columbia, where he held an instructorship and later earned a doctorate in psychology. During this period, he wrote his first book, Dialectic, published in 1927.
Adler later worked with Scott Buchanan at the People's Institute and collaborated with him for many years on their respective Great Books projects.
Intellectual development and philosophic evolution
While working in journalism and attending night classes during his adolescence, Adler encountered writings by philosophers including Plato, Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, John Locke, John Stuart Mill. These figures became central reference points in his intellectual development. Adler’s philosophical views developed toward what he described as the identification and correction of errors in contemporary philosophy, a position he articulated in his 1985 book Ten Philosophical Mistakes: Basic Errors in Modern Thought.In this work, Adler argued that certain foundational problems in modern philosophy originated with René Descartes in continental philosophy and with Thomas Hobbes and David Hume in British philosophy. He attributed these problems to what he characterized as insufficient engagement with Aristotle by thinkers who rejected classical philosophical frameworks. Adler further contended that these errors were extended by later philosophical movements, including Kantian idealism and existentialism, as well as by utilitarian and analytic philosophy associated with figures such as John Stuart Mill, Jeremy Bentham, and Bertrand Russell. Adler maintained that his own philosophical approach addressed these issues through concepts and distinctions derived from Aristotelianism.
Chicago
In 1930, Robert Maynard Hutchins, the recently appointed president of the University of Chicago and an earlier acquaintance of Adler, arranged for Adler to be hired by the University of Chicago Law School as a professor of the philosophy of law. Members of the University of Chicago philosophy faculty, including James Hayden Tufts, Edwin Arthur Burtt, and George Herbert Mead, expressed "grave doubts" about Adler’s qualifications in philosophy and opposed his appointment to the university's Department of Philosophy. Adler became the first individual without a formal legal background to join the law school faculty.Following the success of a Great Books seminar that influenced University of Chicago trustee and businessman Walter Paepcke, Paepcke founded the Aspen Institute. Adler subsequently taught philosophy to business executives at the institute.
Popular appeal
Adler sought to present philosophy to a general audience, and several of his works, including How to Read a Book, achieved wide circulation. He also supported the concept of economic democracy and wrote the preface to Louis O. Kelso's 1958 book The Capitalist Manifesto. Adler frequently collaborated with Arthur Rubin, a longtime associate from his undergraduate years at Columbia University, who assisted him in his research and writing.In Adler's own words:
Dwight Macdonald once criticized Adler's literary style by saying "Mr. Adler once wrote a book called How to Read a Book. He should now read a book called How to Write a Book."
Encyclopedia and educational reform
Adler and Robert Hutchins jointly founded the Great Books of the Western World program and the Great Books Foundation. In 1952, Adler established the Institute for Philosophical Research and served as its director. He served on the Board of Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica, where he compiled A Syntopicon and later the Propaedia. Adler succeeded Hutchins as chairman of the Board of Editors in 1974.As director of editorial planning for the fifteenth edition of Encyclopædia Britannica, beginning in 1965, Adler played a central role in the reorganization of the encyclopedia's structure and presentation of knowledge. He also developed the Paideia Proposal, which led to the creation of the Paideia Program, a school curriculum focused on guided reading and discussion of selected texts at each grade level. In 1990, Adler and Max Weismann founded the Center for the Study of the Great Ideas in Chicago.
Great books of the Western canon
Religion and theology
Adler was born into a secular Jewish family. In his early twenties, he became interested in the work of Thomas Aquinas, particularly the Summa Theologica. He later wrote that its intellectual rigor and clarity led him to rank theology among his principal philosophical interests. Adler became strongly associated with Thomism and frequently contributed to Catholic philosophical and educational journals, as well as lecturing at Catholic institutions. As a result, he was sometimes assumed to be a Catholic convert, though this was not the case at the time.In 1940, James T. Farrell described Adler as "the leading American fellow-traveller of the Roman Catholic Church", comparing his views to those of prominent Catholic philosophers such as Étienne Gilson, Jacques Maritain, and Martin D'Arcy. Adler also admired Henri Bergson.
Despite his affinity, Adler delayed formal conversion to Catholicism. Farrell attributed Adler's delay in joining the Church to his being among those Christians who "wanted their cake and... wanted to eat it too" and compared him to the Emperor Constantine, who waited until he was on his deathbed to formally become a Catholic. Adler continued to reflect on theological questions for several decades and described himself in 1980, in How to Think About God: A Guide for the Twentieth-Century Pagan, as identifying with the "pagan" referenced in the subtitle.
In a 1980 interview conducted by Ken Myers, Adler stated that moral rather than intellectual considerations had prevented his conversion to Christianity. Myers noted that Adler was baptized as an Episcopalian in 1984. Offering insight into Adler's conversion, Myers quotes him from a subsequent 1990 article in Christianity magazine: "My chief reason for choosing Christianity was because the mysteries were incomprehensible. What's the point of revelation if we could figure it out ourselves? If it were wholly comprehensible, then it would just be another philosophy."
According to his friend Deal Hudson, Adler "had been attracted to Catholicism for many years" and "wanted to be a Roman Catholic, but issues like abortion and the resistance of his family and friends" kept him away. Many thought he was baptized as an Episcopalian rather than a Catholic solely because of his "wonderful – and ardently Episcopal – wife" Caroline. Hudson suggests it is no coincidence that it was only after her death in 1998 that he took the final step. In December 1999, in San Mateo, where he had moved to spend his last years, Adler was formally received into the Catholic Church by a long-time friend and admirer, Bishop Pierre DuMaine. "Finally," wrote another friend, Ralph McInerny, "he became the Roman Catholic he had been training to be all his life".
Despite not being a Catholic for most of his life, on account of his lifelong participation in the Neo-Thomist movement and his almost equally long membership in the American Catholic Philosophical Association, this latter, according to McInerny is willing to consider Adler "a Catholic philosopher".
Philosophy
Adler referred to Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics as the "ethics of common sense" and also as "the only moral philosophy that is sound, practical, and undogmatic." Thus, it is the only ethical doctrine that answers all the questions that moral philosophy should and can attempt to answer, neither more nor less, and that has answers that are true by the standard of truth that is appropriate and applicable to normative judgments. In contrast, Adler believed that other theories or doctrines try to answer more questions than they can or fewer than they should, and their answers are mixtures of truth and error, particularly the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant.Adler was a self-proclaimed "moderate dualist" and viewed the positions of psychophysical dualism and materialistic monism to be opposite sides of two extremes. Regarding dualism, he dismissed the extreme form of dualism that stemmed from such philosophers as Plato and Descartes, as well as the theory of extreme monism and the mind–brain identity theory. After eliminating the extremes, Adler subscribed to a more moderate form of dualism. He believed that the brain is only a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for conceptual thought; that an "immaterial intellect" is also requisite as a condition; and that the difference between human and animal behavior is a radical difference in kind. Adler defended this position against many challenges to dualistic theories.