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Alan Ryan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British philosopher (born 1940)

For other people named Alan Ryan, seeAlan Ryan (disambiguation).
Alan Ryan
Born
Alan James Ryan

(1940-05-09)9 May 1940 (age 85)
London, England[1]
SpouseKate Ryan
Education
Alma materBalliol College, Oxford
Philosophical work
EraContemporary philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnalytic
Institutions
Doctoral studentsJeremy Waldron
Main interestsPolitical philosophy

Alan James RyanFBA (born 9 May 1940) is a British philosopher. He was Professor ofPolitics at theUniversity of Oxford. He was also Warden ofNew College, Oxford, from 1996 to 2009.[2] He retired asProfessor Emeritus in September 2015[3][4] and lives inSummertown, Oxford.[5]

Biography

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Ryan was born on 9 May 1940 inLondon, England. He was educated atChrist's Hospital,[6][7]Balliol College, Oxford, andUniversity College, London. Elected a fellow of New College in 1969, he later taught at Princeton University, and returned to New College, Oxford, in 1996 to take up the Wardenship. He was made a Fellow of the British Academy in 1986.

A political theorist and historian of political thought, Ryan is a recognized authority on the development of modernliberalism, especially the work ofJohn Stuart Mill, having contributed directly to the 'Reversionary' school, which led to a re-examination of Mill's work from the 1970s. His academic work also takes in broader themes inpolitical theory, including thephilosophy of social science, the nature ofproperty, the history of political thought, andliberalism of the 19th and 20th centuries.

Ryan has held positions at the Universities of Oxford,Essex,Keele andPrinceton University andUniversity of Virginia School of Law.[3] He was also a Visiting Professor of Political Science at The University of Texas at Austin, Australian National University, The New School and many others.

Ryan is a regular contributor toThe New York Review of Books, theLondon Review of Books, andThe Times Literary Supplement, and continues to write on political theory and the history of political thought.[8]

Books

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  • The Philosophy of John Stuart Mill (1970): an examination of Mill's philosophy of science, its relation to his ethical thought, and a defence of the view that Mill's work is largely coherent, concentrating on Mill'sA System of Logic.
  • The Philosophy of the Social Sciences (1970): an introduction to the philosophy of social science.
  • J.S. Mill (1975): a guide through the important works of Mill, and the themes to be found therein.
  • Property and Political Theory (1984)
  • Property (1987)
  • Russell: A Political Life (1993)
  • John Dewey and the High Tide of American Liberalism (1995)
  • Liberal Anxieties and Liberal Education (1998): given as a lecture series at the University of California, Berkeley, contains autobiographical material.
  • On Politics: A History of Political Thought: From Herodotus to the Present (2012) traces the origins of political philosophy from the ancient Greeks to Machiavelli in Book I and from Hobbes to the present age in Book II
  • The Making of Modern Liberalism (2012) exploration of the origins and nature of liberalism from the Enlightenment through its triumphs and setbacks in the twentieth century
  • On Machiavelli: The Search for Glory (2013): an analysis of Machiavelli's philosophy and its place in the politics of its time

References

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  1. ^Ryan, Alan (2015).On Hobbes: Escaping the War of All against All. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.ISBN 978-0-87140-834-1.
  2. ^"Birthday's today".The Telegraph. 9 May 2013. Archived fromthe original on 9 May 2013. Retrieved29 April 2014.Prof Alan Ryan, Warden of New College, Oxford, 1996–2009, 73.
  3. ^abPerAlan Ryan's Homepage. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  4. ^Perhttp://www.politics.ox.ac.uk/people.html?cat=19&search=academic_profiles&task=search (SelectEmeritus listing.) Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  5. ^Christopher Hood, Desmond King, & Gillian Peele, eds,Forging a Discipline, Oxford University Press, 2014, page vii.
  6. ^"About CH".www.christs-hospital.org.uk. Retrieved9 July 2019.
  7. ^"Liberal Anxieties and Liberal Education".archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved9 July 2019.
  8. ^E.g. Alan Ryan, "Paradigms Lost: How Oxford Escaped the Paradigm Wars of the 1960s and 1970s", in Christopher Hood, Desmond King, & Gillian Peele, eds,Forging a Discipline, Oxford University Press, 2014, page vii.

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