Étienne Henri Gilson was born into a Roman Catholic family in Paris on 13 June 1884. He was educated at a number of Roman Catholic schools in Paris before attending lycée Henri IV in 1902, where he studied philosophy. Two years later he enrolled at the Sorbonne, graduating in 1907 after having studied under many fine scholars, including Lucien Lévy Bruhl, Henri Bergson and Emile Durkheim. Gilson taught in a number of high schools after his graduation and worked on a doctoral thesis on Descartes, which he successfully completed (Sorbonne) in 1913. On the strength of advice from his teacher, Lévy Bruhl, he began to study medieval philosophy in great depth, coming to see Descartes as having strong connections with medieval philosophy, although often finding more merit in the medieval works he saw as connected than in Descartes himself. He was later to be highly esteemed for his work in medieval philosophy and has been described as something of a saviour to the field. From 1913 to 1914 Gilson taught at the University of Lille. His academic career was postponed during the First World War while he took up military service. During his time in the army he served as second lieutenant in a machine-gun regiment and was awarded the Croix de Guerre for bravery upon relief from his duties. After the war, he returned to academic life at Lille and (also) Strasbourg, and in 1921 he took up an appointment at the Sorbonne teaching the history of medieval philosophy. He remained at the Sorbonne for eleven years prior to becoming Professor of Medieval Philosophy at the College de France in 1932. During his Sorbonne years and throughout his continuing career Gilson had the opportunity to travel extensively to North America, where he became highly influential as a historian and medievalist, demonstrating a number of previously undetermined important differences among the period’s greatest figures.
Gilson’s Gifford Lectures, delivered at Aberdeen in 1931 and 1932, titled ‘The Spirit of Medieval Philosophy’, were published in his native language (L’espirit de la philosophie medieval, 1932) before being translated into English in 1936. Gilson believed that a defining feature of medieval philosophy was that it operated within a framework endorsing a conviction to the existence of God, with a complete acceptance that Christian revelation enabled the refinement of meticulous reason. In this regard he described medieval philosophy as particularly ‘Christian’ philosophy.
Gilson married in 1908 and the union produced three children, two daughters and one son. Sadly, his wife died of leukaemia in late 1949. In 1951 he relinquished his chair at the College de France in order to attend to responsibilities he had at the Institute of Medieval Studies in Toronto, Canada, an institute he had been invited to establish in 1929. Gilson died 19 September 1978 at the age of ninety-four.
A note on the occasional virtues of old, forgotten books
Etienne Gilson was the General Editor of this series, 'A History of Philosophy', which included the following volumes:
1. Ancient Philosophy; Anton Pegis 2. Medieval Philosophy; Armand A. Maurer 3. Modern Philosophy: Descartes to Kant; Gilson and Thomas Langan 4. Recent Philosophy: Hegel to the Present; Gilson, Langan and Maurer
Let's start this review with the contents of this book, 'Recent Philosophy':
Introduction to 'A History of Philosophy' - Etienne Gilson, v; Preface to 'Recent Philosophy', ix
Part One: German Philosophy, by Thomas Langan
Introduction, 3
I. Post-Kantian Background, 5 Johann Gottlieb Fichte, 9 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, 16 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, 23 Marxism-Leninism, 44 Arthur Schopenhauer 57
II. The Original Existential Revolt, 67 Soren Kierkegaard, 69 Friedrich Nietzsche, 78
III. Beyond Positivism and Psychologism, 93 Wilhelm Dilthey, 93 The Phenomenological Movement, 100 Edmund Husserl, 105 Max Scheler, 118 Nicolai Hartmann, 129
IV. Two German Existentialists, 145 Martin Heidegger, 145 Karl Jaspers, 153
Part Two: French and Italian Philosophy, by Etienne Gilson
Introduction, 171
V. Ideology in France, 172 Cabanis, 172 Destutt de Tracy, 175 Maine de Biran, 180
VI. Ideology in Italy, 192 Francesco Soave, 192 Melchiorre Gioia, 195 Giandomenico Romagnosi, 200 Melchiorre Delfico, 205
VII. The Christian Reaction, 208 Louis de Bonald, 209 Joseph de Maistre, 214 Felicite de Lamennais, 217 Louis Bautain, 222 From Traditionalism to Christian Philosophy, 226
VIII. The Philosophical Reaction in France and Italy, 232 French Spiritualism: Victor Cousin, 232 The Italian Metaphysical Revival, Antonio Rosmini and Vincenzo Gioberti, 237 The Spreading of Ontologism, 261
IX. French Positivism, 266 Auguste Comte, 267 Positive Psychology, 277 Positive Sociology, 283 Philosophical Reflection on Science, 287
X. Maine de Biran's French Posterity, 290 Felix Ravaisson, 290 Jules Lachelier, 296 Emile Boutroux, 300 Henri Bergson, 306
XI. In the Spirit of Criticism, 318 Renouvier's Neocriticism, 318 Octave Hamelin, 321 Leon Brunschvicg, 326
XII. In the Spirit of Scholasticism, 330 The Origins of the Movement, 331 Leo XIII, 338 Neoscholasticism, 345
XIII. In the Spirit of Augustinianism, 335 Alphonse Gratry, 355 Leon Olle-Laprune, 358 Maurice Blondel, 360
XIV. Early Twentieth Century Philosophy in Italy, 363 Benedetto Croce, 364 Giovanni Gentile, 366 Critical Idealism, 368
XV. Existentialism and Phenomenology in France, by Thomas Langan, 374 Gabriel Marcel, 374 Jean-Paul Sartre, 381 Maurice Merleau-Ponty, 386 Mikel Dufrenne, 396 Paul Ricoeur, 401
Part Three: English Philosophy, by Armand A. Maurer
XVI. Utilitarianism, 411 Jeremy Bentham, 413 John Stuart Mill, 419
XVII. Philosophy of Evolution, 433 Charles Darwin, 434 Herbert Spencer, 439 Emergent Evolutionism, 446
XVIII. Idealism, 451 Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 451 Idealism Goes to College, 454 Francis Herbert Bradley, 457 Bernard Bosanquet, 464
XIX. Pragmatic Humanism: F. C. S. Schiller, 476
XX. Return to Realism, 485 G. E. Moore, 485 Bertrand Russell, 497 Alfred North Whitehead, 507
XXI. Language and Metaphysics, 520 Ludwig Wittgenstein, 521 Logical Positivism and the Vienna Circle, 530 Rudolf Carnap, 533 A. J. Ayer, 538 The Analysis of Ordinary Language, 543
Part Four: American Philosophy, by Armand A. Maurer
XXII. The Beginnings, 553 Philosophizing Divines, 554 Cadwallader Colden and the Beginnings of the Philosophy of Nature, 564 Beginnings of Social and Political Philosophy, 566
XXIII. New England Transcendentalism, 570 Ralph Waldo Emerson, 572 Orestes Brownson, 576
XXIV. Idealism of the Schools, 588 Borden Parker Bowne, 589 Josiah Royce, 595 Sage School of idealism, 602
XXV. Resurgent Realism, 604 The New Realism, 605 Critical Realism, 611 George Santayana, 615
XXVI. Pragmatism, 623 Charles Sanders Pierce, 624 William James, 634 John Dewey, 649
Epilogue, 664
Notes, 669
Index, 865
My copy of this was published in 1966 and it lists Volume 1, "Ancient Philosophy", as 'in preparation'. So I cannot even be certain the first volume of this series ever actually appeared... Also, I believe the new edition (ISBN: 1597524867) of this specific volume ('Recent philosophy: Hegel to the Present'), published by Wipf & Stock Publishers, is an exact reproduction with only (perhaps) a new preface. My single volume 1966 edition has 876 pages, the new edition (2005, in two volumes) has 892 pages listed here at Amazon.
Of course, this volume is dated by its age and also its Catholic orientation. This book carries both the Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur; it will not surprise anyone to learn that most of the books I read do not do so. Now, France (and Italy) were, and still remain, the center of the Catholic intellectual universe. But even still, it is simply absurd that German Philosophy gets 170 pages while French and Italian Philosophy gets 230 pages! How does one possibly justify giving Schelling only 7 pages while de Biran gets 11? As I said, absurd... Also, the inclusion of a chapter on French 'neo-Kantianism' (XI) without a chapter or section on German neo-Kantianism (F. A. Lange, Kuno Fischer, and Hans Vaihinger, e.g.) is equally bizarre. But one could multiply quibbles endlessly: how is it that Gentile merits a mention but Gramsci does not? Generally, the sections on English and American Philosophy are also too long, with utterly pointless mentioning of people like Bosanquet, Bowne and Colden. But enough of that! This book is the first place I encountered, several decades ago, people like Hartmann, Biran, Lamennais and several others. For that alone I am grateful. Also, there are almost 200 pages of notes in which I naturally delighted.
But why bother picking up this book? One of the reasons to read people you don't agree with is that they occasionally show you things you would otherwise have missed. For instance, Langan, in the final section of his essay on Nietzsche asks, in effect, 'when do the Greeks laugh?' and, in a handful of pages, manages to speak more sense about Zarathustra's joy, and most especially its distance from the joys of the archaic Greeks, than one finds in whole books on the subject. Although Langan likely was unaware of this, Nietzsche points at this 'Zarathustrian Joy' in a similar manner when he himself, in Ecce Homo, refers to Zarathustra as the 'Yes-Saying' part of his work. The herd of perpetually indignant 'supermen' of course are barely aware of this...
Langan wonders "gaiety - is this really a Greek Ideal?" - And correctly concludes that it is not. Thus Langan is surely correct to say of Zarathustra that in "his greatness, in his mercy, he is more than Greek." At the very beginning of 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra', in the Prologue, Zarathustra decides to go down the mountain to share his knowledge and joy with mankind; now, anyone who has read the Iliad knows that this gesture is simply inconceivable to an Achilles, - who was universally considered the greatest of the Greeks. If there is no reason to help, Achilles will help no one. Indeed, with reason, he is prepared to sit on his hands while those that love him die at the hands of their (and his) enemies. But Nietzsche has his creature Zarathustra compare himself to the sun, asking, "what would your happiness be had you not those for whom you shine?" Like the sunshine Nietzsche intends his Zarathustra to be a gift to everyone; the 'deserving' and 'undeserving' alike... As Langan correctly observes, "in practice, Zarathustra feels some compassion, else why would he continue to preach to the 'little ones,' and 'the hens in the barnyard'..."
Exactly. But is all this, at bottom, merely a case of old wine in new bottles? Does Nietzsche intend to go back to, or reinstate, some natural or historic order? Langan observes that for Nietzsche, "Being was indeed becoming, [which] he never doubted, characterizing this principle as 'true, but deadly'." Now, the greatest interpreter of Nietzsche, Heidegger, wants to go back to the Pre-Socratics; I mean to their pre-Platonic experience of Being. It is Heidegger who seems to wish to go back to the archaic Greeks. But how are we to understand Nietzsche? Are we to choose between Langan and Heidegger? Let us not make this choice too easy for ourselves! Nietzsche also knows there is no going back:
"Whispered to the conservatives.-- What was not known formerly, what is known, or might be known, today--a reversion, a return in any sense or degree is simply not possible. We physiologists at least know that. Yet all priests and moralists have believed the opposite--they wanted to take mankind back, to screw it back, to a former measure of virtue. Morality was always a bed of Procrustes. Even the politicians have aped the preachers of virtue at this point: today too there are still parties whose dream it is that all things might walk backwards like crabs. But no one is free to be a crab. Nothing avails: one must go forward--step by step further into décadence..." (Twilight of the Idols, Skirmishes of an Untimely Man, section 43).
Yes, we have all read Heidegger's scathing attack on Nietzsche's 'succumbing' to the lure of values in the fourth volume of his brilliant Nietzsche study, but as we can see from the above quote (from 'Twilight of the Idols') Nietzsche has taken the measure of Heidegger, avant le fait, and has given history his judgment: to Nietzsche, Heidegger is but another priest or moralist, trying to fit the world into a bed of Procrustes, - that is, into a former measure of virtue. Like Catholic conservatives, Heidegger wants to go back...
Langan, however, has a finer ear for Nietzsche's dedication to the new and his love of joy than does Heidegger. It is in these two aspects of Nietzsche's thought that one can correctly speak of Zarathustra's "qualities of a suspiciously Christian tint" - but Langan entirely misses Nietzsche's esoteric practices. Thus he mistakenly treats Zarathustra as Nietzsche's mouthpiece...
But enough of that! Langan sees, correctly sees, what so many commentators refuse to see: Zarathustra is, and can only be, a post-Christian development. This is but one example of the gems one can pick from old books written by people that one does not agree with. This book is conceived as a textbook for Catholic students, but one is here and there surprised by the sophistication of the analysis. This is why we should all continue to read, for example, Thomists, Marxists, Straussians and Phenomenologists; we read them in order not to miss what we might ordinarily have missed. Four stars for being what is by necessity quite rare: an interesting textbook...
I don't know what to rate this, as little philosophy as I've read. My brother read Gilson in the seminary, which is what drew me to him--this is the fourth book of his I've read in the past several months. This book, unlike the other three (History of Medieval Philosophy I think being the one of the bunch I found most interesting), is actually a compilation that I believe he edited and contributed to, but it wasn't clear which parts were whose.
I only read Volume 2, and I did not read this cover to cover, but picked and chose. I should probably have read Volume 1 or at least skimmed it, as this volume professedly goes all over the map trying to draw out the most interesting threads in Western philosophy from c. 1800 to 1950. I read about early German successors to Kant, Italian and French neo-scholastics (since Gilson was one, I figured that section was well worth reading), and some British and American philosophers. I was interested to see what they said about the Transcendentalists and was surprised to find Notre Dame's Orestes Brownson as the figure they spent the most time discussing from that group. I was also curious to read their opinion of Bertrand Russell, but beyond a certain affiliation with realism I can't remember any of it. Certainly nothing to make me rush out and find some Russell to read.