Celebrating four great female philosophers

Iris Murdoch
Iris Murdoch
Is time real? Do we have free will? Philosophical questions such as these seem to have little connection with current issues like the climate crisis or Brexit. Philosophy is central to human life However four women philosophers thought that philosophy should be a central activity in human life and they are the focus of new research by Dr Clare Mac Cumhaill, presented at a major exhibition this summer. Iris Murdoch, Elizabeth Anscombe, Phillipa Foot and Mary Midgley met as undergraduates studying Philosophy at Oxford University during the Second World War, when many of the male academics and students were away. The women, sometimes known as the Quartet, believed the task of philosophy was to look closely and carefully at human life and to think about what was important or trivial, serious or silly. Clare and her co-researcher Dr Rachael Wiseman direct In Parenthesis, a project which explores the work, lives and friendships of these remarkable women. Golden age of female philosophy The researchers want to understand why and how these women emerged as dominant forces in 20th Century moral philosophy. Their ultimate aim is to see the Quartet achieve recognition as a school in Analytic Philosophy and rewrite the history of 20th Century philosophy in the UK, which has mostly ignored women philosophers.
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