- Alfred Edward Taylor
Alfred Edward Taylor (
December 22 ,1869 -October 31 ,1945 ) was a philosopher most famous for his contributions to thephilosophy of religion ,moral philosophy , andPlato scholarship.cite web|url=http://www.giffordlectures.org/Author.asp?AuthorID=164 |title=Biography - Alfred Taylor |publisher=Gifford Lecture Series |first=Kelly Van |last=Andel |accessdate=2008-04-12] He was a fellow of theBritish Academy . He was president of theAristotelian Society from 1928 to 1929.Trained at
Oxford , Taylor began his career under the influence of the then fashionable movement ofBritish Idealism . His early monograph, "Elements of Metaphysics", can largely be seen as an attempt to distill the results of the idealist movement in a textbook form. Under the influence of his colleaguesSamuel Alexander and G. F. Stout, he began to move away from his idealist roots towards towards a realist epistemology.Fact|date=April 2008As a scholar of Plato, he was perhaps most famous for advocating the view that the vast majority of views spoken by the character of
Socrates in the Platonic dialogues accurately reflected the views of the historical Socrates. His text "Plato: The Man and His Work" and his commentary on the "Timaeus" are particularly important contributions.In moral philosophy, he explored a number of issues, including free will and the relationship between rightness and goodness, and was heavily influenced by the work of classical philosophers such as Plato and
Aristotle as well as the medieval scholastics.Fact|date=April 2008Among his important contributions in the philosophy of religion are his 1926-1928
Gifford Lectures , "The Faith of a Moralist".References
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