Paul Arthur Schilpp

Paul Arthur Schilpp (German: [ʃɪlp]; February 6, 1897 – September 6, 1993) was an American educator.

Biography

Schilpp was born in Dillenburg, Germany and immigrated to the United States prior to World War I. Schilpp taught at Northwestern University,University of Puget Sound, University of California-Santa Barbara, University of the Pacific and spent the last years of his professional career teaching undergraduate philosophy courses at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.

A serious and driven teacher of moral decision and thought, often controversial, Schilpp came to Southern Illinois University in 1965 after he was considered "too old to teach at respectable universities." Southern Illinois University agreed with his condition that he be allowed to instruct undergraduate general studies courses in philosophy thus allowing him to reach the greatest number of what Schilpp called "malleable minds". He was known for his passionate teaching methods and highly energetic delivery.

Schilpp was for many years the editor of the Library of Living Philosophers. As editor he was able to convince such notable personalities as Albert Einstein, Kurt Gödel and Bertrand Russell to contribute to the library.

Schilpp died of respiratory failure at the age of 96 in St. Louis, Missouri.

Publications

  • Paul Arthur Schilpp, ed. (1974), The Philosophy of Karl Popper, Chicago: Open Court Publishing Co. Description and contents, v. 1 (ISBN 0-87548-141-8) & v. 2 (ISBN 0-87548-142-6)
  • Paul Arthur Schilpp (1929), Do We Need a New Religion?, New York: Henry Holt and Company
  • Paul Arthur Schilpp, ed. (1949), The Philosophy of Ernst Cassirer

Sources

gollark: I think you could probably make it work okay either by, as they suggested, segmenting anime-looking stuff, or creating synthetic screen-y images which either contain anime things somewhere or don't.
gollark: The issue isn't competing standards, really.
gollark: All we can do is watch as our ridiculously fast computers and networks grow ever slower with stacked layers of ridiculous hacks, as dependencies accrete and bizarre increasingly convoluted security problems come with them.
gollark: It could have been controlled, once. But now it's impossible to replace the decades upon decades of legacy design decisions.
gollark: Also networking.
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