ABSTRACT

The story of Ted Honderich, philosopher, a story of a perilous philosophical life, marked by critical examination, and a compelling personal life full of human drama. This is the story of Ted Honderich's perilous progress from boyhood in Canada to the Grote Professorship of Mind and Logic at University College London, A. J. Ayer's chair. It is compelling, candid and revealing about the beginning and the goal, and everything in between: early work as a journalist on The Toronto Star, travels with Elvis Presley, arrival in Britain, loves and friendships, academic rivalries and battles, marriages and affairs, self-interest and empathy. It sets out resolutely to explain how and why it all happened.

It is as much a narrative of Ted Honderich's philosophy. He makes hard problems real. Philosophy from consciousness and determinism to political violence and democracy comes into sharp focus.

Along the way, questions keep coming up. Does the free marriage owe anything to the analytic philosophy? What are the costs of truth? Are the politics of England slowly making it an ever-better place? Is an action's rightness independent of the mixture of motives out of which it came?

chapter 1|32 pages

This Green Summer

chapter 2|16 pages

Village

chapter 3|13 pages

City, School, Saturdays, Girls

chapter 4|28 pages

From University Distracted, First Love

chapter 5|22 pages

Awake in England

chapter 8|26 pages

Nadir, Determinism Again, America

chapter 12|17 pages

Mind and Brain etc., Anathema

chapter 13|16 pages

Professor, Psychoneural Intimacy, Disarrays

chapter 15|26 pages

Life-Hopes, the Grote, an Idea'd Girl

chapter 17|15 pages

Ingrid, Court Again

chapter 18|18 pages

Consciousness as Existence, Farewells

chapter 19|41 pages

Coda