Philippa Foot

Philosopher

Birthday October 3, 1920

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Owston Ferry, England, UK

DEATH DATE 2010-10-3, Oxford, England, UK (90 years old)

#25130 Most Popular

1893

Born Philippa Ruth Bosanquet in Owston Ferry, North Lincolnshire, she was the daughter of Esther Cleveland (1893–1980) and Captain William Sidney Bence Bosanquet (1893–1966) of the Coldstream Guards of the British Army.

1900

Her paternal grandfather was barrister and judge, Sir Frederick Albert Bosanquet, Common Serjeant of London from 1900 to 1917.

1920

Philippa Ruth Foot (née Bosanquet; 3 October 1920 – 3 October 2010) was an English philosopher and one of the founders of contemporary virtue ethics.

Her work was inspired by Aristotelian ethics.

Along with Judith Jarvis Thomson, she is credited with inventing the trolley problem.

She was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society.

She was a granddaughter of the U.S. President Grover Cleveland.

1922

Her maternal grandfather was the 22nd and 24th President of the United States, Grover Cleveland.

1939

Foot was educated privately and at Somerville College, Oxford, 1939–1942, where she attained a first-class degree in philosophy, politics, and economics.

1942

Her association with Somerville, interrupted only by government service as an economist from 1942 to 1947, continued for the rest of her life.

1947

She was a lecturer in philosophy, 1947–1950; fellow and tutor, 1950–1969; senior research fellow, 1969–1988; and honorary fellow, 1988–2010.

She spent many hours there in debate with G. E. M. Anscombe and learnt from her about Wittgenstein's analytic philosophy and a new moral perspective: Foot said "I learned every thing from her".

1950

Foot's work in the 1950s and 1960s sought to revive Aristotelian ethics in modernity, competing with its major rivals, modern deontology and consequentialism (the latter a term dubbed by Anscombe).

Some of her work was crucial to a re-emergence of normative ethics within analytic philosophy, notably her critiques of consequentialism, non-cognitivism, and Nietzsche.

Foot's approach was influenced by the later work of Wittgenstein, although she seldom dealt explicitly with his materials.

She had the opportunity to listen to Wittgenstein lecture once or twice.

In her earlier career, Foot's works were meta-ethical in character, pertaining to the nature and status of moral judgment and language.

Her essays "Moral Arguments" and "Moral Beliefs" were significant in dethroning non-cognitivism as the dominant meta-ethical theory of preceding decades.

Though non-cognitivism may be traced back to Hume's Is–ought problem, its most explicit formulations are found in the works of A. J. Ayer, C. L. Stevenson, and R. M. Hare, who focused on abstract or "thin" ethical concepts such as good/bad and right/wrong.

They argued that moral judgments do not express propositions, i.e., that they are not truth-apt, but express emotions or imperatives.

Thus, fact and value are independent of each other.

This analysis of abstract or "thin" ethical concepts was contrasted with more concrete or "thick" concepts, such as cowardice, cruelty, and gluttony.

Such attributes do not swing free of the facts, yet they carry the same "practicality" that "bad" or "wrong" do.

They were intended to combine the particular, non-cognitive "evaluative" element championed by the theory with the descriptive element.

One could detach the evaluative force by employing them in an "inverted commas sense", as one does in attempting to articulate thoughts in a system one opposes, for example by putting "unmanly" or "unladylike" in quotation marks.

That leaves purely descriptive expressions that apply to actions, whereas employing such expressions without the quotation marks would add the non-cognitive extra of "and such action is bad".

Foot objected to this distinction and its underlying account of thin concepts.

Her defense of the cognitive and truth-evaluable character of moral judgment made the essays crucial in bringing the question of the rationality of morality to the fore.

Practical considerations involving "thick" ethical concepts – "but it would be cruel", "it would be cowardly", "it's for her to do", or "I promised her I wouldn't do it" – move people to act one way rather than another, but remain as purely descriptive as any other judgment pertaining to human life.

They differ from thoughts such as "it would be done on a Tuesday" or "it would take about three gallons of paint" not by admixing what she considers a non-factual, attitude-expressing, "moral" element, but simply by the fact that people have reason not to do things that are cowardly or cruel.

Her lifelong devotion to the question is apparent in all periods of her work.

It is on the "why be moral?"

1960

In the 1960s and 1970s, Foot held a number of visiting professorships in the United States, including at Cornell, MIT, Berkeley, and City University of New York.

1972

She lived at 15 Walton Street from 1972 until 2010, and is commemorated by an Oxfordshire Blue Plaque on the house.

1976

She was appointed Griffin Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Los Angeles in 1976 and taught there until 1991, dividing her time between the United States and Britain.

Contrary to common belief, Foot was not a founder of Oxfam.

She joined the organization about six years after its foundation.

She was an atheist.

She was once married to the historian M. R. D. Foot, and at one time shared a flat with the philosopher and novelist Iris Murdoch.

2010

She died in 2010 on her 90th birthday.