Þorsteinn Gylfason
Þorsteinn Gylfason was an Icelandic philosopher, translator, musician and poet. Þorsteinn distinguished himself in Icelandic public life with his writings in newspapers, journals and publications.
His life and accomplishments
Early life
Þorsteinn was born and raised in Reykjavík, the capital of Iceland. His parents were Guðrún Vilmundardóttir and Gylfi Þorsteinsson Gíslason, a university professor and government minister. He was the brother of Vilmundur Gylfason, a politician, and Þorvaldur Gylfason, an economist.Þorsteinn graduated from the Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík gymnasium in 1961 and subsequently received a grant to study at Harvard University. He left Harvard with a B.A. degree in philosophy, having studied under the tutelage of Willard Van Orman Quine. He returned home for graduate studies in Icelandic, and later attended the University of Munich and Magdalen College, Oxford from 1965 to 1971. At Oxford, he studied under Gilbert Ryle and befriended well-known characters from philosophical circles, such as Alfred Jules Ayer. This influence affected his work in philosophy to a considerable extent.
Career
Þorsteinn worked as an assistant professor at the University of Iceland from 1971, and was made full professor in 1989. He was visiting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the London School of Economics.Þorsteinn received a number of awards and acknowledgements for his works, amongst them the Þórbergur Þórðarson and National Icelandic Literature Prizes in 1997. In 1994, he was awarded the Knights Cross of the Icelandic Falcon by Icelandic president Vigdís Finnbogadóttir for his contributions to Icelandic culture and academia.
Works
Þorsteinn wrote 12 books on philosophy and philology, including An Essay on Man, An Essay on the World, Thinking in Icelandic and Justice and Injustice. He also published over 37 academic papers in various philosophical journals and composed poetry and lyrics, either with musical composer Atli Heimir Sveinsson or to the music of Kurt Weill and Richard Wagner.His translations to Icelandic included On Liberty by John Stuart Mill, Søren Kierkegaard's Repetitions, Plato's Phaedo, Descartes' Meditations, all of whom were published by the Icelandic Literature Society, for which he served as a series chief editor for almost two decades.
Philosophy
Þorsteinn's philosophical work was mostly in the philosophy of language and mind and political philosophy. His method and style of philosophy was very much rooted in the analytic tradition, through influence from men such as W.V.O. Quine and Gilbert Ryle. He also found inspiration in the continental philosophers, especially from existentialism in the style of Søren Kierkegaard and Martin Heidegger, whose works he translated into Icelandic. Later on, his focus was on contemporary work by Elizabeth Anscombe, Donald Davidson, Saul Kripke, John Rawls, Philippa Foot, Charles Taylor and Richard Rorty.Þorsteinn's early works are in the style of 20th century logical positivism—highly suspicious of esoteric Hegelian metaphysics. He later turned away from comprehensive theories to focus on specific problems. He considered himself an analytic philosopher insofar as "the ideas that have proven to be the most fruitful and inspiring, have been those of scholars generally considered to be 'analytic philosophers'." He usually said he was not much of a utilitarian neither in personal thinking nor politics and favoured deontology and virtue ethics.
His final words when describing himself as a philosopher were: "I believe that no philosophical theory can avoid paying the utmost heed to the natural sciences."
Death
Þorsteinn was diagnosed with terminal cancer of the stomach on 12 August 2005 and died four days later. His funeral took place in Reykjavík Cathedral.Publications
Books
- Tilraun um manninn , Reykjavík 1970.
- Þrætubókarkorn , Reykjavík, 1981.
- Tilraun um heiminn , Reykjavík 1992.
- Sprek af reka , Reykjavík 1993.
- Að hugsa á íslenzku , Reykjavík 1996.
- Réttlæti og ranglæti , Reykjavík 1998.
- Söngfugl að sunnan , Reykjavik 2000.
- Sál og mál , Reykjavík 2006.
Booklets
- Rauður fyrirlestur , Reykjavík 1982.
- Valdsorðaskak , Reykjavík 1982.
- Orðasmíð , Reykjavík 1991.
- Niflungahringurinn , Listahátíð í Reykjavík 1994. See Works for the Stage.
- Gagnrýni hreinnar skynsemi , Reykjavík 1994..
Principal essays in books or periodicals
- “Skemmtilegt er myrkrið” , Tímarit Máls og menningar 1971, 285-313.
- “Að hugsa á íslenzku” , Skírnir 1973, 129-158.
- “Ætti sálarfræði að vera til?” Skírnir 1975, 5-37.
- “Er vit í vísindum?” , Tímarit Máls og menningar 1975, 245-266.
- “Um fyrirburðafræði” , Lífgeislar 1979, 3-34 and 61-66.
- “Hvers vegna í dauðanum?” , Morgunblaðið 12 April 1980.
- “Málrækt í mannlegum fræðum” , Skíma IV, 3.
- “Hvað er réttlæti?” , Skírnir 1984, 159-222.
- “Teikn og tákn” , Stúdentablaðið LXI, 4, 17-19.
- “Tónlist, réttlæti og sannleikur” , Andvari 1985, 127-142.
- “Sur des parlers anciens, faisons des mots nouveaux” , Diogène 1985, 19-36. Also published in English, Spanish and Chinese.
- “Inngangur” to Sigurður Nordal: Einlyndi og marglyndi , Reykjavík 1986, ix-xxxvii.
- “Hundrað og eitt ár” , Tímarit Máls og menningar 1989, 304-318.
- “Ludwig Wittgenstein”, Hugur 1989, 5-22.
- “Martin Heidegger”, Teningur 1989.
- “Snilld og brjálæði” , Tímaritið 2000 1990.
- “Ljósið sem hvarf” , Skírnir 1990, 362-389.
- “Det kreativa ordet” in Georg Klein : Om kreativitet och flow , Stockholm 1990.
- “Skáldskapur og sannleikur” , Teningur 1991, 24-27.
- “Anaxímandros frá Míletos” , Tímarit Máls og menningar 1991, 75-91.
- “Inngangur” and “Skýringar” to René Descartes: Orðræða um aðferð , Reykjavík 1991, 11-54 and 153-202.
- “Líf og sál” in Einar Logi Vignisson og Ólafur Páll Jónsson : Af líkama og sál , Reykjavík 1992.
- “Að gera eða vera” in Hugur Vol. 6, 63-90.
- “Skólar, úhrif og þroski”, 6-11.
- “Er tónlist mál?” Tímarit Máls og menningar 1994.
- “Gildi, boð og ástæður” in Hugur Vol. 6, 14-31.
- “SDG” in Þorsteinn Helgason : Sem niður margra vatna: Sumartónleikar í Skálholtskirkju tuttugu ára, Reykjavík 1995, 29-33
- “Fjölræði og sjálfstæði” in Tímarit lögfræðinga 1995, 1-15.
- “Richard Wagner as a Poet” in Wagner's Ring and Its Icelandic Sources, edited by Úlfar Bragason, Stofnun Sigurðar Nordals, Reykjavík 1995.
- “Túlkun og tjáning” in Leikhúsmál 1996.
- “Sannleikur” in Er vit í vísindum?, Reykjavík 1996.
- “Kan DNA-koden och binas dans betraktas som språk?” in Medicinsk vetenskap vid Karolinska Institutet No. 4 1997.
- “Introduction” to Njál's Saga, Wordsworth Classics of World Literarture, 1998.
- “Inngangur” to Ludwig Wittgenstein's Bláa bókin , Reykjavík 1998.
- “Er eignarréttur náttúrlegur?” in Afmælisrit: Þór Vilhjálmsson sjötugur, Orator, Reykjavík 2000.
- “Inngangur” to René Descartes: Hugleiðingar um frumspeki , Reykjavík 2001.
- “Refir, broddgeltir, dýrlingur og snákur“ in Hugur, Reykjavík 2002.
Principal poems in periodicals and anthologies
- “Glerhús við skál” , Morgunblaðið 1985.
- “Ólafur Jónsson”, Lesbók Morgunblaðsins 1989.
- “Hamingjan um nótt” , Tímarit Máls og menningar 1990 and Spegill, spegill, Reykjavik 1991.
- “Vilmundur Gylfason”, Tímarit Máls og menningar 1990.
- “Ættjarðarkvæði” , Morgunblaðið 1991.
- “Töfraflautan” , Leikskrá Íslensku óperunnar 1991 and Morgunblaðið 1991.
- “Sónhenda með ensku sniði” , Vörður 1993.
- “Skírnarsálmur Alexöndru” , Lesbók Morgunblaðsins 1995.
- “Draugar í bænum á miðvikudagsmorgni” ,
- "Gegnum jarðgöng tímans" , Reykjavík 1998.
Works for the stage
- Richard Wagner: Niflungahringurinn ..
- Jónas í hvalnum 1995..
- Til hinna óbornu .
- Kristnitaka á Íslandi 1999.
Main translations into Icelandic
- Søren Kierkegaard: Repetition. New edition: Hið íslenzka bókmenntafélag, Reykjavík 2000.
- J.S. Mill: On Liberty.
- Plato: Phaedo .
- René Descartes: Meditations, Hið íslenzka bókmenntafélag, Reykjavík 2001.
- Albert Giraud: Pierrot Lunaire, to music by Schönberg. Reprinted in Sprek af reka 1993.
- Emanuel Schikaneder: The Magic Flute, to music by Mozart.
- Martin Heidegger: Aus der Erfahrung des Denkens.
- P.I. Tchaikovsky and K. Shilovsky : Eugene Onegin, to music by Tchaikovsky.
- Søren Kierkegaard: "Ómar af strengleikum" , Jón á Bægisá I, 1994.
- Engelbert Humperdinck: Hans og Gréta , performed 1996.
- Franz Lehár: Káta ekkjan , performed 1997.
- Verse by Lucretius, J.W. v. Goethe, Robert Burns, A.O. Vinje, Gabriele d'Annunzio, Stefan George, Rainer Maria Rilke, Bertolt Brecht, W.B. Yeats, T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden and others, published in periodicals. Collected together with much previously unpublished material in Sprek af reka 1993.