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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FAT-FLA |
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FERRIER, JAMES FREDERICK (1808-1864) , Scottish metaphysical writer, was born in Edinburgh on the 16th of June 18o8, the son of John Ferrier, writer to the signet. His mother was a sister of John Wilson (Christopher North). He was educated at the university of Edinburgh and Magdalen College, Oxford, and subsequently, his metaphysical tastes having been fostered by his intimate friend, Sir William Hamilton, spent some time at Heidelberg studying German philosophy. In 1842 he was appointed professor of civil history in Edinburgh University, and in 1845 professor of moral philosophy and political economy
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Ferrier's first contribution to metaphysics was a series of articles in Blackwood's Magazine (18381839), entitled An Introduction to the Philosophy of Consciousness. In these he condemns previous philosophers for ignoring in their psycho-logical investigations the fact of consciousness, which is the distinctive feature of man, and confining their observation to the so-called " states of the mind." Consciousness comes into manifestation only when the man has used the word " I " with full knowledge of what it means. This notion he must originate within himself. Consciousness cannot spring from the states which are its object, for it is in antagonism to them. It originates in the will, which in the act of consciousness puts the " I " in the place of our sensations. Morality, conscience, and responsibility are necessary results of consciousness. These articles were succeeded by a number of others, of which the most important were The Crisis of Modern Speculation (1841), Berkeley and Idealism (1842), and an important examination of Hamilton's edition of Reid (1847), which contains a vigorous attack on the philosophy of common sense. The perception of matter is pronounced to be the ne plus ultra of thought, and Reid, for presuming to analyse it, is declared to be a representationist in fact, although he professed to be an intuitionist. A distinction is made between the " perception of matter " and " our apprehension of the perception of matter." Psychology vainly tries to analyse the former. Metaphysic shows the latter alone to be analysable, and separates the subjective element
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Ferrier's matured philosophical doctrines find expression in the Institutes of Metaphysics (1854), in which he claims to have met the twofold obligation
ordinary thinking.The problems of knowing and the known are treated in the " Epistemology
The leading contradiction which is corrected in the " Agnoiology
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The " Ontology or Theory of Being " forms the third and final division. It contains a discussion of the origin of knowledge, in which Ferrier traces all the perplexities and errors of philosophers to the assumption of the absolute existence of matter. The conclusion arrived at is that the only true real and independent existences are minds-together-with-that-which-theyapprehend, and that the one strictly necessary absolute existence is a supreme and infinite and everlasting mind in synthesis with all things. Ferrier's works are remarkable for an unusual charm and simplicity of style. These qualities are especially noticeable in the Lectures on Greek Philosophy, one of the best introductions on the subject in the English language. A complete edition of his philosophical writings was published in 1875, with a memoir by E. L. Lushington; see also monograph by E. S. Haldane in the Famous Scots Series .End of Article: FERRIER, JAMES FREDERICK (1808-1864) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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