A History of Philosophy (Copleston)
A History of Philosophy is a history of Western philosophy written by the English Jesuit priest Frederick Charles Copleston originally published in nine volumes between 1946 and 1975. As is noted by The Encyclopedia Britannica, the work became a "standard introductory philosophy text for thousands of university students, particularly in its U.S. paperback edition." Since 2003 it has been marketed as an eleven volume work with two previously published other works by Copleston being added to the series.
Overview
The work provides extensive coverage of Western philosophy from the Pre-Socratics through to John Dewey, Bertrand Russell, George Edward Moore, Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty.Originally conceived as a three volume work covering ancient, medieval and modern philosophy, and written to serve as a textbook for use in Catholic ecclesiastical seminaries, the work grew into nine volumes published between 1946 and 1975 and to become a standard work of reference for philosophers and philosophy students that was noted for its objectivity.
A tenth and eleventh volume were added to the series in 2003 by Continuum. The tenth volume Russian Philosophy had previously appeared as Philosophy in Russia in 1986. The eleventh volume Logical Postivism and Existentialism had previously appeared as the revised 1972 edition of Contemporary Philosophy .
The series has been translated into Italian, French, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, Romanian, Polish and Persian.
Volume summaries
The following is a summary of details for the eleven volumes:Volume 1: Greece and Rome
Originally published in 1946, this volume covers:- Pre-Socratic philosophy
- The Socratic period
- Plato
- Aristotle
- Post-Aristotelian philosophy
Volume 2: Augustine to Scotus
Originally published in 1950, this volume, which has also borne the subtitle Medieval Philosophy, covers:- Pre-mediaeval Influences
- The Carolingian Renaissance
- The Tenth, Eleventh, and Twelfth Centuries
- Islamic and Jewish Philosophy
- The Thirteenth Century
Volume 3: Ockham to Suarez
Originally published in 1953, this volume which has also borne the subtitle Late Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, covers:- The Fourteenth Century
- Philosophy of the Renaissance
- Scholasticism of the Renaissance
Volume 4: Descartes to Leibniz
Originally published in 1958, this volume, which has also borne the subtitle The Rationalists, covers:- René Descartes
- Blaise Pascal
- Nicolas Malebranche
- Baruch Spinoza
- Gottfried Leibniz
Volume 5: Hobbes to Hume
- Thomas Hobbes
- John Locke
- Isaac Newton
- George Berkeley
- David Hume
Volume 6: Wolff to Kant
- The French Enlightenment
- The German Enlightenment
- The Rise of the Philosophy of History
- Christian Wolff
- Immanuel Kant
Volume 7: Fichte to Nietzsche
- Johann Gottlieb Fichte
- Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling
- Friedrich Schleiermacher
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- The Transformation of Idealism
- Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
- Søren Kierkegaard
- Neo-Kantianism
- Friedrich Nietzsche
Volume 8: Bentham to Russell
Originally published in 1966, this volume, which has also borne the subtitle Utilitarianism to Early Analytic Philosophy, covers:- British Empiricism
- The Idealist Movement in Great Britain
- Idealism in America
- The Pragmatist Movement
- The Revolt Against Idealism
Volume 9: Maine de Biran to Sartre
- From the French Revolution to Auguste Comte
- From Auguste Comte to Henri Bergson
- From Henri Bergson to Jean-Paul Sartre
Volume 10: Russian Philosophy
- Ivan Kireevsky, Peter Lavrov, and other Russian philosophers
- Philosophy in Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
- Religion and Philosophy: Vladimir Solovyov
- Plekhanov, Bogdanov, Lenin and Marxism
- Nikolai Berdyaev and other philosophers in exile
Volume 11: Logical Positivism and Existentialism
Reception and legacy
Reviewing the first volume in 1947, George Boas remarked that: "None of interpretations will do much harm to the reader of this very scholarly book. Most of them are put in parentheses, as if they were inserted to warn the seminarists that they must not be taken in by the pagans. They could be removed, and a history of ancient philosophy ad usum infidelium would result which would be head and shoulders above the usual histories. He obviously knows the ancient literature well and, if he had not felt himself obliged to be a modern Eusebius, he had the knowledge to write a genuine history. On the other hand, he is too given to periodizing and generalizing. One can have but the highest praise for Father Copleston's erudition; it is too bad that he could not have put it into writing a really original study of ancient philosophical ideas."Regarding the objectivity of the work, Martin Gardner, echoing remarks he had made previously, noted: "The Jesuit priest Frederick Copleston wrote a marvelous multi-volume history of philosophy. I have no inkling of what he believed about any Catholic doctrine."
Reviewing 1986's Philosophy in Russia Geoffrey A. Hosking noted that the author was "as fair to the atheist and socialist thinkers as he is to the religious ones, with whom, as a member of the Society of Jesus, he is presumably more in sympathy." And said that overall it was "a magisterially competent survey." But, he concluded: "I confess, though, to being slightly disappointed that Copleston's enormous experience did not generate a few more original insights, and in particular did not provoke him into examining the most important of all the practical questions that Russian philosophy poses."
Writing in 2017, philosopher Christia Mercer credited the work as "a hugely ambitious and admirably clear study" but remarked that although the author includes "mystics like Master Eckhart and prominent Jesuit scholastics like Francisco Suárez, he entirely ignores the richly philosophical spiritual writings of even the most prominent late medieval women, reducing the entirety of philosophy to a series of great men, each responding to the ones who went before."
Philosopher and theologian Benedict M. Ashley compared A History of Philosophy to some of the most famous histories of philosophy as follows: "Some histories of philosophy, like the admirable one of Frederick Copleston, only attempt to give an accurate account of various philosophies in their general historical setting. Others, like Bertrand Russell in his absurd History of Western Philosophy or Etienne Gilson in his brilliant The Unity of Philosophical Experience proffer an argument for a particular philosophical position."
The Washington Post: "Copleston's account of western philosophy has long been a standard reference, most familiar to students as a series of slender rack-sized paperbacks. Copleston writes with welcome clarity, but without the slight dumbing down of Will Durant's engaging Story of Philosophy or the biases of Bertrand Russell's provocative History of Western Philosophy. In other words, Copleston's volumes are still the place to start for anyone interested in following man's speculations about himself and his world."
Gerard J. Hughes in The New Catholic Encyclopedia, described the work as "a model of clarity, objectivity, and scholarly accuracy, unsurpassed in its accessibility and balance."
The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the Jesuits: " monumental nine-volume published between 1946 and 1974, for which would receive wide-spread acclaim. Described by The Times of London as “the best all-round history of philosophical thinking from the pre-Socratics to Sartre”, Copleston’s history became renowned for the erudition of its scholarship, the comprehensive scope of its content, and the relatively objective position from which it was written."
The Review of Metaphysics: " best known historian of philosophy in the English speaking world, and a man to whom many are indebted."
Jon Cameron : "To this day Copleston’s history remains a monumental achievement and stays true to the authors it discusses being very much a work in exposition."
As of September 1979, The Washington Post reported that: " best-selling multi-volume work, Frederick Copleston's " History of Philosophy" has collectively sold 1.6 million copies."