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Elmer Sprague

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years before his retirement, but he retained an abiding interest in New York City, especially the borough of Brooklyn. After his retirement he became a volunteer archivist in the New York City Parks Department and helped to develop a database for the city's public monuments. His last book, Brooklyn Public Monuments: Sculpture for Civic Memory and Urban Pride, was published in 2008. It combined his skill as a photographer with his knowledge of the borough in which for so many years he had lived, taught, and raised his children. Elmer's major philosophical writings were in the areas of metaphysics and the philosophy of mind as well as in analyzing the distinctive nature of philosophy, itself. He viewed it as a mistake to treat mind and body as two abstract categories to be somehow assembled into a third abstract category purportedly encompassing both. Rather he thought the features that have been attributed separately to mind and to body ought to be returned to their lived context in "the person." His finely contextual approach is exemplified in his books: What Is Philosophy? (1961), Metaphysical Thinking (1978), and Persons and Their Minds (1999). He also had a longstanding interest in the history of British philosophy and published widely in this area. Early in Elmer's career at Brooklyn College he and his colleague Paul Taylor were asked by the Philosophy Department to prepare an anthology for use in the department's introductory course. The result was the very successful Knowledge and Value that influenced many other anthologies of its type and provided an ongoing funding source for department activities and needs.
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whom would visit the Philosophy Department at Brooklyn College periodically to meet and speak with him. Elmer once described himself as a person who couldn't be told things but always had to learn them for himself. This revealing comment might lead those who did not know Elmer to believe that he was a solitary inquirer or considered this to be the paradigm of learning and knowledge. This was not at all the case. In fact, he was a strong proponent of the importance of collaborative or collective inquiry. For years he participated in the Brooklyn Wittgenstein Club, a study group of various (and ever changing) members of the department. These sessions, including comments by the other participants in the group, often served as a catalyst for Elmer to develop new insights about material with which he was already extremely familiar. In the 1980s Brooklyn College developed a core curriculum, a set of general education requirements for undergraduates that included an introductory course in philosophy. Elmer was an enthusiastic supporter of the new curriculum and began to teach his students using the group method. He divided the students into groups, presented them with questions about a given reading, and asked them to arrive at answers collectively.
166:, published in 1999, is a Wittgensteinian-Ryleian critique of modern philosophy of mind. He viewed it as a mistake to treat mind and body as two abstract categories to be somehow assembled into a third abstract category purportedly encompassing both. Rather he thought the features that have been attributed separately to mind and to body ought to be returned to their lived context in "the person." His finely contextual approach is exemplified in his books: What Is Philosophy? (1961), Metaphysical Thinking (1978), and Persons and Their Minds (1999). He also had a longstanding interest in the history of British philosophy and published widely in this area. Early in Elmer's career at Brooklyn College he and his colleague Paul Taylor were asked by the Philosophy Department to prepare an anthology for use in the department's introductory course. The result was the very successful Knowledge and Value that influenced many other anthologies of its type. 25: 173:
Elmer was also an outstanding photographer. For example, anyone who was fortunate enough to view the pictures he took of many of the natural sights of Iceland during a philosophy conference in 1984 would be struck by their haunting beauty. He and Gretchen moved to a home in the Hudson Valley a few
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Like his written work, Elmer's teaching was characterized by its clarity. He was an extremely influential teacher and the recipient of a college-wide Excellence in Teaching Award. A number of his students went on to academic careers in philosophy. He also inspired scores of other students, many of
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His previous publications include articles on Ryle and Hume, and the books, Metaphysical Thinking and What is Philosophy published by New York Oxford Press in 1961. His specialties are the philosophy of mind, metaphysics and the philosophy of language. His book
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Brooklyn Public Monuments: Sculpture for Civic Memory and Urban Pride, Dog Ear Publishing, Indianapolis, IN, 2008
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at Oxford (1948–51), and was the Paul Robert and Jean Shuman Hanna Professor of Philosophy at
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Brooklyn Public Monuments: Sculpture for Civic Memory and Urban Pride.
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Le Roy Finch, Henry (1979). "Wittgenstein–The Later Philosophy".
18: 194:. The Putnam County News and Recorder. 24 April 2019 49:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 136:, and a B.A. and D.Phil. from Oxford. He was a 8: 124:(1924 – April 19, 2019) was a professor at 109:Learn how and when to remove this message 183: 326:University of Nebraska–Lincoln alumni 7: 47:adding citations to reliable sources 296:20th-century American philosophers 291:21st-century American philosophers 236:10.1111/j.1467-9205.1979.tb00406.x 14: 23: 16:American philosopher (1924–2019) 34:needs additional citations for 1: 301:American philosophy academics 266:List of American philosophers 224:Philosophical Investigations 130:City University of New York 342: 316:Hamline University faculty 311:Brooklyn College faculty 306:American Rhodes Scholars 164:Persons and their Minds 134:University of Nebraska 43:improve this article 261:American philosophy 192:"Elmer D. Sprague" 142:Hamline University 149:Lincoln, Nebraska 119: 118: 111: 93: 333: 248: 247: 219: 213: 210: 204: 203: 201: 199: 188: 126:Brooklyn College 114: 107: 103: 100: 94: 92: 51: 27: 19: 341: 340: 336: 335: 334: 332: 331: 330: 271: 270: 257: 252: 251: 221: 220: 216: 211: 207: 197: 195: 190: 189: 185: 180: 115: 104: 98: 95: 58:"Elmer Sprague" 52: 50: 40: 28: 17: 12: 11: 5: 339: 337: 329: 328: 323: 318: 313: 308: 303: 298: 293: 288: 283: 273: 272: 269: 268: 263: 256: 253: 250: 249: 214: 205: 182: 181: 179: 176: 147:Growing up in 138:Rhodes Scholar 117: 116: 31: 29: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 338: 327: 324: 322: 321:Hume scholars 319: 317: 314: 312: 309: 307: 304: 302: 299: 297: 294: 292: 289: 287: 284: 282: 279: 278: 276: 267: 264: 262: 259: 258: 254: 245: 241: 237: 233: 229: 225: 218: 215: 209: 206: 193: 187: 184: 177: 175: 171: 167: 165: 159: 158: 154: 150: 145: 143: 139: 135: 131: 127: 123: 122:Elmer Sprague 113: 110: 102: 91: 88: 84: 81: 77: 74: 70: 67: 63: 60: â€“  59: 55: 54:Find sources: 48: 44: 38: 37: 32:This article 30: 26: 21: 20: 230:(4): 84–89. 227: 223: 217: 208: 196:. Retrieved 186: 172: 168: 163: 160: 156: 146: 121: 120: 105: 96: 86: 79: 72: 65: 53: 41:Please help 36:verification 33: 286:2019 deaths 281:1924 births 275:Categories 178:References 153:Lee Lawrie 99:March 2008 69:newspapers 244:0190-0536 198:25 August 151:, "where 255:See also 144:(1987). 128:of the 83:scholar 242:  85:  78:  71:  64:  56:  90:JSTOR 76:books 240:ISSN 200:2020 62:news 232:doi 45:by 277:: 238:. 226:. 246:. 234:: 228:2 202:. 112:) 106:( 101:) 97:( 87:· 80:· 73:· 66:· 39:.

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"Elmer Sprague"
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Learn how and when to remove this message
Brooklyn College
City University of New York
University of Nebraska
Rhodes Scholar
Hamline University
Lincoln, Nebraska
Lee Lawrie
"Elmer D. Sprague"
doi
10.1111/j.1467-9205.1979.tb00406.x
ISSN
0190-0536
American philosophy
List of American philosophers
Categories
1924 births
2019 deaths
21st-century American philosophers
20th-century American philosophers

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