Sir Stuart Newton Hampshire (/ˈhæmpʃɪər/; 1 October 1914 – 13 June 2004) was an Oxford Universityphilosopher, literary critic and university administrator. He was one of the antirationalist Oxford thinkers who gave a new direction to moral and political thought in the post-World War II era.
Hampshire was born in Healing, Lincolnshire, the son of George Newton Hampshire - a fish merchant in nearby Grimsby. Hampshire was educated at Repton School and at Balliol College, Oxford, where he matriculated as a history scholar. He did not confine himself to history, switching to the study of Greats and immersing himself in the study of painting and literature. As was the culture at Balliol, his intellectual development owed more to his gifted contemporaries than to academic tutors. Having taken a first class degree, in 1936 he was elected to a Fellowship of All Souls College, Oxford, where he researched and taught philosophy initially as an adherent of logical positivism. He participated in an informal discussion group with some of the leading philosophers of his day, including J. L. Austin, H. L. A. Hart, and Isaiah Berlin.
Hampshire is the largest county in South East England and remains the third largest shire county in the United Kingdom despite losing more land than any other English county in all contemporary boundary changes. At its greatest size in 1890, Hampshire was the fifth largest county in England. It now has an overall area of 3,700 square kilometres (1,400sqmi), and measures about 86 kilometres (53mi) east–west and 76 kilometres (47mi) north–south.
The Hampshire or Hampshire Down is a breed of sheep which originated around 1829 from a cross of Southdowns with the Old Hampshire breed, the Wiltshire Horn, and the Berkshire Nott, all horned, white-faced sheep — these were native to the open, untilled, hilly stretch of land known as the Hampshire Downs.
History
John Twynam, a Hampshire farmer, crossed his then-Hampshire flock with Cotswold rams in around 1829. The resultant half-bred rams were compact and blocky animals and from around 1835 were sold into six or more of what were to become the first recognised pedigree Hampshire Down flocks in the United Kingdom.
The Southdowns had long dark brown or black legs, matured early, produced the best of mutton and a fine quality of medium wool. The original Hampshire was larger, coarser, but hardier, slower to mature, with inferior flesh, and a longer but coarser wool. The Southdown had always been remarkable for its power of transmitting its special characteristics to its progeny by other kinds of sheep, and hence it soon impressed its own characteristics on its progeny by the Hampshire. The horns of the original breed have disappeared; the face and legs have become dark, the frame has become more compact, the bones smaller, the back broader and straighter, the legs shorter, and the flesh and wool of better quality, while the superior hardiness and greater size, as well as the large head and Roman nose of the old breed, still remain. Hampshires of the 1890s matured early and fattened readily. They clipped from six to seven pounds of wool, suitable for combing, which was longer than Southdown wool, but less fine.
Hampshire is a station on the Port Authority of Allegheny County's light rail network, located in the Beechview neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The street level stop is located on a small island platform in the middle of Broadway Avenue, through which The T travels along former streetcar tracks. The station serves a densely populated residential area and also the neighborhood's small but crowded business district. It is located in an area where bus service is limited because of the hilly terrain.
Logic Lane Ep.2: I'm Going To Tamper With Your Beliefs A Little (1972)
Sir Isaiah Berlin and Stuart Hampshire discuss J.L. Austin's work and character. They also discuss the period in the 1930's when the Oxford Philosophy Movement began. Included in the group were Berlin, Hampshire, Ayer, Austin, etc.
Credits: Producer, Noel Chanan; director, Michael Chanan; composers, Henry Ward, Michael Wyman; cameramen, Jack Hazant, Andrew Carchrae; film editor, Brian Nicholls.
Transcript can be found here: http://berlin.wolf.ox.ac.uk/lists/nachlass/imgoing.pdf
published: 09 Nov 2019
1/6 "I'm Going To Tamper With Your Beliefs A Little"
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
published: 02 Feb 2010
STUART HAMPSHIRE (1914-2004) 1
LECTURA DE UN FRAGMENTO DE LA OBRA DE ESTE FILÓSOFO.
published: 13 Mar 2018
STUART HAMPSHIRE 2
LECTURA DE UN FRAGMENTO DE ESTE PENSADOR.
published: 13 Mar 2018
6/6 "I'm Going To Tamper With Your Beliefs A Little"
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
published: 02 Feb 2010
Spinoza's 'Ethics': What do you mean by 'God'?
Jonathan Rée discusses Spinoza's philosophical treatise the Ethics, an 'idealised intellectual autobiography' that, through its dry definitions and propositions, manages to tell a gripping story. Through this story emerges some of Spinoza's key ideas: that knowledge is a continuum rather than a dichotomy between sensation and reason; that the path to freedom is not about getting what you want but learning to love the world rationally; and his concept of God not as a separate supernatural being, but rather as nature or the universe as a whole, which one comes to love with 'intellectual love' as individual identity is subsumed into the greater whole.
Film by Anthony Wilks
Get 20% off Jonathan Rée's audiobook, 'Becoming a Philosopher: Spinoza to Sartre', with code YOU20 at checkout here: ht...
published: 09 Oct 2018
COMENTARIO DE ALGUNOS PÁRRAFOS DE DOS TEORÍAS DE LA MORALIDAD DE STUART HAMPSHIRE
COMENTARIO DE ALGUNOS FRAGMENTOS DE DOS TEORÍA DE LA MORALIDAD DE STUART HAMPSHIRE.
SUSCRIBETE A MI CANAL.
JOSÉ MANUEL LÓPEZ GARCÍA.
published: 28 Oct 2018
1/5 Logic Lane: A Philosophical Retrospective (1972)
It is a retrospective by Professor Sir Alfred Ayer of the development of philosophy in Oxford from the 1930's to 1972. Excerpts are included from some of the other films in the series which use conversations on a variety of topics between pairs of philosophers as a basic format. Among those appearing are Sir Isaiah Berlin, Stuart Hampshire, Professor Gilbert Ryle, Iris Murdoch and David Pears. Presenter: Professor Sir Alfred Ayer. Introduced by: Michael Chanan. Sound: Greg Bailey. Camera: Jack Hazan, Andrew Carchrae. Additional narration: Christopher Hitchins. Music: Henry Ward, Michael Nyman. Editor: Noel Chanan. Writer: Michael Chanan.
Sir Isaiah Berlin and Stuart Hampshire discuss J.L. Austin's work and character. They also discuss the period in the 1930's when the Oxford Philosophy Movement ...
Sir Isaiah Berlin and Stuart Hampshire discuss J.L. Austin's work and character. They also discuss the period in the 1930's when the Oxford Philosophy Movement began. Included in the group were Berlin, Hampshire, Ayer, Austin, etc.
Credits: Producer, Noel Chanan; director, Michael Chanan; composers, Henry Ward, Michael Wyman; cameramen, Jack Hazant, Andrew Carchrae; film editor, Brian Nicholls.
Transcript can be found here: http://berlin.wolf.ox.ac.uk/lists/nachlass/imgoing.pdf
Sir Isaiah Berlin and Stuart Hampshire discuss J.L. Austin's work and character. They also discuss the period in the 1930's when the Oxford Philosophy Movement began. Included in the group were Berlin, Hampshire, Ayer, Austin, etc.
Credits: Producer, Noel Chanan; director, Michael Chanan; composers, Henry Ward, Michael Wyman; cameramen, Jack Hazant, Andrew Carchrae; film editor, Brian Nicholls.
Transcript can be found here: http://berlin.wolf.ox.ac.uk/lists/nachlass/imgoing.pdf
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educationa...
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educationa...
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
Jonathan Rée discusses Spinoza's philosophical treatise the Ethics, an 'idealised intellectual autobiography' that, through its dry definitions and propositions...
Jonathan Rée discusses Spinoza's philosophical treatise the Ethics, an 'idealised intellectual autobiography' that, through its dry definitions and propositions, manages to tell a gripping story. Through this story emerges some of Spinoza's key ideas: that knowledge is a continuum rather than a dichotomy between sensation and reason; that the path to freedom is not about getting what you want but learning to love the world rationally; and his concept of God not as a separate supernatural being, but rather as nature or the universe as a whole, which one comes to love with 'intellectual love' as individual identity is subsumed into the greater whole.
Film by Anthony Wilks
Get 20% off Jonathan Rée's audiobook, 'Becoming a Philosopher: Spinoza to Sartre', with code YOU20 at checkout here: https://lrb.me/audio
Read more on Spinoza in the LRB:
Jonathan Rée: Spinoza's Big Idea https://lrb.me/8x8
Richard Popkin: Spinoza v the Synagogue https://lrb.me/kx8
George Steiner on 'Spinoza and Other Heretics' https://lrb.me/cx8
Jonathan Rée: Exit Cogito https://lrb.me/5x8
Stuart Hampshire: Small Creatures https://lrb.me/hx8
Frank Kermode: Theory and Truth https://lrb.me/3x8
Margaret Jacob: Radical Enlightenment https://lrb.me/ux8
Find more philosophy essays in the LRB: https://lrb.me/nx8
Subscribe to the LRB from just £1 per issue: https://lrb.me/ytsub
ABOUT THE LRB
The LRB is Europe’s leading magazine of books and ideas. Published twice a month, it provides a space for some of the world’s best writers to explore a wide variety of subjects in exhilarating detail – from culture and politics to science and technology via history and philosophy. In the age of the long read, the LRB remains the pre-eminent exponent of the intellectual essay, admired around the world for its fearlessness, its range and its elegance.
As well as essays and book reviews each issue also contains poems, an exhibition review, ‘short cuts’, letters and a diary, and is available in print, online, and offline via our app. Subscribers enjoy unlimited access to almost 15,000 articles in our digital archive. Our website features a regular blog and a channel of audio and video content, including podcasts, author interviews and highlights from the events programme at the London Review Bookshop.
Jonathan Rée discusses Spinoza's philosophical treatise the Ethics, an 'idealised intellectual autobiography' that, through its dry definitions and propositions, manages to tell a gripping story. Through this story emerges some of Spinoza's key ideas: that knowledge is a continuum rather than a dichotomy between sensation and reason; that the path to freedom is not about getting what you want but learning to love the world rationally; and his concept of God not as a separate supernatural being, but rather as nature or the universe as a whole, which one comes to love with 'intellectual love' as individual identity is subsumed into the greater whole.
Film by Anthony Wilks
Get 20% off Jonathan Rée's audiobook, 'Becoming a Philosopher: Spinoza to Sartre', with code YOU20 at checkout here: https://lrb.me/audio
Read more on Spinoza in the LRB:
Jonathan Rée: Spinoza's Big Idea https://lrb.me/8x8
Richard Popkin: Spinoza v the Synagogue https://lrb.me/kx8
George Steiner on 'Spinoza and Other Heretics' https://lrb.me/cx8
Jonathan Rée: Exit Cogito https://lrb.me/5x8
Stuart Hampshire: Small Creatures https://lrb.me/hx8
Frank Kermode: Theory and Truth https://lrb.me/3x8
Margaret Jacob: Radical Enlightenment https://lrb.me/ux8
Find more philosophy essays in the LRB: https://lrb.me/nx8
Subscribe to the LRB from just £1 per issue: https://lrb.me/ytsub
ABOUT THE LRB
The LRB is Europe’s leading magazine of books and ideas. Published twice a month, it provides a space for some of the world’s best writers to explore a wide variety of subjects in exhilarating detail – from culture and politics to science and technology via history and philosophy. In the age of the long read, the LRB remains the pre-eminent exponent of the intellectual essay, admired around the world for its fearlessness, its range and its elegance.
As well as essays and book reviews each issue also contains poems, an exhibition review, ‘short cuts’, letters and a diary, and is available in print, online, and offline via our app. Subscribers enjoy unlimited access to almost 15,000 articles in our digital archive. Our website features a regular blog and a channel of audio and video content, including podcasts, author interviews and highlights from the events programme at the London Review Bookshop.
It is a retrospective by Professor Sir Alfred Ayer of the development of philosophy in Oxford from the 1930's to 1972. Excerpts are included from some of the ot...
It is a retrospective by Professor Sir Alfred Ayer of the development of philosophy in Oxford from the 1930's to 1972. Excerpts are included from some of the other films in the series which use conversations on a variety of topics between pairs of philosophers as a basic format. Among those appearing are Sir Isaiah Berlin, Stuart Hampshire, Professor Gilbert Ryle, Iris Murdoch and David Pears. Presenter: Professor Sir Alfred Ayer. Introduced by: Michael Chanan. Sound: Greg Bailey. Camera: Jack Hazan, Andrew Carchrae. Additional narration: Christopher Hitchins. Music: Henry Ward, Michael Nyman. Editor: Noel Chanan. Writer: Michael Chanan.
It is a retrospective by Professor Sir Alfred Ayer of the development of philosophy in Oxford from the 1930's to 1972. Excerpts are included from some of the other films in the series which use conversations on a variety of topics between pairs of philosophers as a basic format. Among those appearing are Sir Isaiah Berlin, Stuart Hampshire, Professor Gilbert Ryle, Iris Murdoch and David Pears. Presenter: Professor Sir Alfred Ayer. Introduced by: Michael Chanan. Sound: Greg Bailey. Camera: Jack Hazan, Andrew Carchrae. Additional narration: Christopher Hitchins. Music: Henry Ward, Michael Nyman. Editor: Noel Chanan. Writer: Michael Chanan.
Sir Isaiah Berlin and Stuart Hampshire discuss J.L. Austin's work and character. They also discuss the period in the 1930's when the Oxford Philosophy Movement began. Included in the group were Berlin, Hampshire, Ayer, Austin, etc.
Credits: Producer, Noel Chanan; director, Michael Chanan; composers, Henry Ward, Michael Wyman; cameramen, Jack Hazant, Andrew Carchrae; film editor, Brian Nicholls.
Transcript can be found here: http://berlin.wolf.ox.ac.uk/lists/nachlass/imgoing.pdf
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
An hour-long dialogue with Stuart Hampshire on Oxford philosophy, especially J. L. Austin; one of six films comprising Logic Lane (1972), a series of educational films on philosophy in Oxford made by Michael Chanan.
Jonathan Rée discusses Spinoza's philosophical treatise the Ethics, an 'idealised intellectual autobiography' that, through its dry definitions and propositions, manages to tell a gripping story. Through this story emerges some of Spinoza's key ideas: that knowledge is a continuum rather than a dichotomy between sensation and reason; that the path to freedom is not about getting what you want but learning to love the world rationally; and his concept of God not as a separate supernatural being, but rather as nature or the universe as a whole, which one comes to love with 'intellectual love' as individual identity is subsumed into the greater whole.
Film by Anthony Wilks
Get 20% off Jonathan Rée's audiobook, 'Becoming a Philosopher: Spinoza to Sartre', with code YOU20 at checkout here: https://lrb.me/audio
Read more on Spinoza in the LRB:
Jonathan Rée: Spinoza's Big Idea https://lrb.me/8x8
Richard Popkin: Spinoza v the Synagogue https://lrb.me/kx8
George Steiner on 'Spinoza and Other Heretics' https://lrb.me/cx8
Jonathan Rée: Exit Cogito https://lrb.me/5x8
Stuart Hampshire: Small Creatures https://lrb.me/hx8
Frank Kermode: Theory and Truth https://lrb.me/3x8
Margaret Jacob: Radical Enlightenment https://lrb.me/ux8
Find more philosophy essays in the LRB: https://lrb.me/nx8
Subscribe to the LRB from just £1 per issue: https://lrb.me/ytsub
ABOUT THE LRB
The LRB is Europe’s leading magazine of books and ideas. Published twice a month, it provides a space for some of the world’s best writers to explore a wide variety of subjects in exhilarating detail – from culture and politics to science and technology via history and philosophy. In the age of the long read, the LRB remains the pre-eminent exponent of the intellectual essay, admired around the world for its fearlessness, its range and its elegance.
As well as essays and book reviews each issue also contains poems, an exhibition review, ‘short cuts’, letters and a diary, and is available in print, online, and offline via our app. Subscribers enjoy unlimited access to almost 15,000 articles in our digital archive. Our website features a regular blog and a channel of audio and video content, including podcasts, author interviews and highlights from the events programme at the London Review Bookshop.
It is a retrospective by Professor Sir Alfred Ayer of the development of philosophy in Oxford from the 1930's to 1972. Excerpts are included from some of the other films in the series which use conversations on a variety of topics between pairs of philosophers as a basic format. Among those appearing are Sir Isaiah Berlin, Stuart Hampshire, Professor Gilbert Ryle, Iris Murdoch and David Pears. Presenter: Professor Sir Alfred Ayer. Introduced by: Michael Chanan. Sound: Greg Bailey. Camera: Jack Hazan, Andrew Carchrae. Additional narration: Christopher Hitchins. Music: Henry Ward, Michael Nyman. Editor: Noel Chanan. Writer: Michael Chanan.
Sir Stuart Newton Hampshire (/ˈhæmpʃɪər/; 1 October 1914 – 13 June 2004) was an Oxford Universityphilosopher, literary critic and university administrator. He was one of the antirationalist Oxford thinkers who gave a new direction to moral and political thought in the post-World War II era.
Hampshire was born in Healing, Lincolnshire, the son of George Newton Hampshire - a fish merchant in nearby Grimsby. Hampshire was educated at Repton School and at Balliol College, Oxford, where he matriculated as a history scholar. He did not confine himself to history, switching to the study of Greats and immersing himself in the study of painting and literature. As was the culture at Balliol, his intellectual development owed more to his gifted contemporaries than to academic tutors. Having taken a first class degree, in 1936 he was elected to a Fellowship of All Souls College, Oxford, where he researched and taught philosophy initially as an adherent of logical positivism. He participated in an informal discussion group with some of the leading philosophers of his day, including J. L. Austin, H. L. A. Hart, and Isaiah Berlin.
Speaking after the jury delivered their conclusion, assistant coroner for HampshireDarrenStuart said he plans to write a prevention of future deaths report highlighting 'shortcomings' that give him 'cause for concern'.
Age ConcernHampshire’s Quiz and Curry Night proved to be a huge success, reflecting the generosity, community spirit, and shared commitment to supporting older people ... Age Concern Hampshire Centre Way Locks HeathSouthampton SO31 6DX.
Winter Swan-Miller stabbed 62-year-old Stuart Crocker 27 times (Picture... Winter Swan-Miller stabbed 62-year-old Stuart Crocker 27 times and strangled him with a handbag strap because he let her therapy pet, Oblivion, escape ... Stuart Crocker (Picture.
...Stuart ... Stuart didn’t get to do a ton of winning with New Hampshire since leaving the friendly, local confines, as the Wildcats failed to win double-digit games, in each of her four season’s there.
BellaStuart comes to UAlbany after spending the last four years at the Unversity of New Hampshire, where she played against her new school on four separate occasions. Stuart’s ties to UAlbany date ...
ALBANY — The UAlbany women’s basketball team has filled out its incoming class for the 2024-25 season, including Shenendehowa graduate BellaStuart, a transfer from New Hampshire... .
BellaStuart returns to the Capital Region after playing four years at New Hampshire... Throughout the 2023-24 season, Stuart averaged 46.2 percent from the field with 165 points and 28 steals ... on Stuart.
Winter Swan-Miller, 37, is accused of stabbing 62-year-old Stuart Crocker 26 times after her therapy dog, Oblivion, escaped from her home in Hampshire... .
Stuart played three seasons for the University of New Hampshire before entering the transfer portal and confirmed the announcement in a social media post. Coincidentally, Stuart’s season-high 15 points came at UAlbany on Jan.