John Cook Wilson


John Cook Wilson was an English philosopher.

Biography

Cook was born in Nottingham, United Kingdom, the only son of a Methodist minister. After Derby Grammar School, 1862–7, Wilson went up to Balliol College, Oxford in 1868, where he read both Classics and Mathematics. He graduated with a rare double double-first: gaining a 1st in Mathematical Moderations, 1869, 1st in Classical Moderations, 1870, 1st in Mathematics finals, 1871, and a 1st in Literae Humaniores in 1872. Wilson became a Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford in 1874. He was Wykeham Professor of Logic and a Fellow of New College, Oxford, from 1889 until his death. H. A. Prichard and W. D. Ross were among his students.
Mathematics, he said, is the best preparation for logic. There is an amusing story of how he introduced calculus in a lecture to classically trained undergraduates. At the end of the lecture 'he walked smartly to the door, locked, or pretended to lock, it, and then standing there with his back to it said with decision : 'No one shall leave this room until you all grasp the essentials of this simple matter'. He had, however, little sympathy with the mathematical logic developed by Bertrand Russell.
Belonging to a generation brought up in the atmosphere of British idealism, he espoused the cause of direct realism. His posthumous collected papers, Statement and Inference, were influential on a generation of Oxford philosophers, including H. H. Price and Gilbert Ryle. He also features prominently in the work of J. L. Austin, John McDowell, and Timothy Williamson. P. F. Strawson's expression, "the attributive tie", in Individuals is named "in memory of Cook Wilson".
In his inaugural lecture Cook Wilson acknowledged that his deepest intellectual debts were to his mathematics tutor at Balliol, Henry Smith, to his Balliol philosophy tutor, T. H. Green, and to the classicist Henry Chandler.
Cook Wilson often argued for the existence of God as an experiential reality. He is quoted saying 'We don't want merely inferred friends, could we be satisfied with an inferred God?' He also had a long running dispute with Lewis Carroll over the barbershop paradox.
Cook Wilson's classical contributions should not be overlooked: "On Rearrangements of the Fifth Books of the Ethics", "On the Structure of the Seventh Book of the Nicomachean Ethics", ch. i–x ; "On the Interpretation of Plato's Timaeus" ; "On the Geometrical Problem in Plato's Meno" and others listed at lxvi–lxxii of Statement and Inference, I. The latest discussion of Cook Wilson's classical work – on the Meno – is to be found in David Wolfsdorf, Trials of Reason.
Cook Wilson married a German woman, Charlotte Schneider, in 1876. They had no children.
He died at his home in North Oxford on 11 August 1915.

Writings

A full list of Cook Wilson's publications can be found in Statement and Inference, ed. A.S.L. Farquharson : lxvi–lxxii.