Charles Taylor (philosopher): Difference between revisions

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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090205180813/http://theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=375 An Interview with Charles Taylor Part 1], [https://web.archive.org/web/20081011235718/http://theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=376 Part 2] and [https://web.archive.org/web/20081011235728/http://theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=440 Part 3]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090205180813/http://theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=375 An Interview with Charles Taylor Part 1], [https://web.archive.org/web/20081011235718/http://theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=376 Part 2] and [https://web.archive.org/web/20081011235728/http://theotherjournal.com/article.php?id=440 Part 3]
* [http://www.ssrc.org/blogs/immanent_frame/ The Immanent Frame] a [[blog]] with posts by Taylor, [[Robert Bellah]], and others concerning Taylor's book ''A Secular Age''
* [http://www.ssrc.org/blogs/immanent_frame/ The Immanent Frame] a [[blog]] with posts by Taylor, [[Robert Bellah]], and others concerning Taylor's book ''A Secular Age''
* [http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/us/taylor.htm Text of Taylor's essay "Overcoming Epistemology"'']
* [http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/us/taylor.htm Text of Taylor's essay "Overcoming Epistemology"]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100627233326/http://bearspace.baylor.edu/Scott_Moore/www/Taylor_info.html Links to secondary sources, reviews of Taylor's works, reading notes]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100627233326/http://bearspace.baylor.edu/Scott_Moore/www/Taylor_info.html Links to secondary sources, reviews of Taylor's works, reading notes]
* [http://goodreads.ca/lectures/taylor/rel_violence04.html Lecture notes to Charles Taylor's talk on Religion and Violence (with a link to the audio) Nov 2004]
* [http://goodreads.ca/lectures/taylor/rel_violence04.html Lecture notes to Charles Taylor's talk on Religion and Violence (with a link to the audio) Nov 2004]
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[[Category:1931 births]]
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[[Category:20th-century Canadian philosophers]]
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[[Category:20th-century Roman Catholics]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian philosophers]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian philosophers]]
[[Category:21st-century Roman Catholics]]
[[Category:Action theorists]]
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[[Category:Analytic philosophers]]
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[[Category:Anglophone Quebec people]]
[[Category:Anglophone Quebec people]]
[[Category:Canadian Roman Catholics]]
[[Category:Canadian male non-fiction writers]]
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[[Category:Canadian people of English descent]]
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[[Category:Canadian political philosophers]]
[[Category:Canadian political philosophers]]

Latest revision as of 10:53, 30 June 2025

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Charles Margrave Taylor Template:Post-nominals (born November 5, 1931) is a Canadian philosopher from Montreal, Quebec, and professor emeritus at McGill University best known for his contributions to political philosophy, the philosophy of social science, the history of philosophy, and intellectual history. His work has earned him the Kyoto Prize, the Templeton Prize, the Berggruen Prize for Philosophy, and the John W. Kluge Prize.

In 2007, Taylor served with Gérard Bouchard on the Bouchard–Taylor Commission on reasonable accommodation with regard to cultural differences in the province of Quebec. He has also made contributions to moral philosophy, epistemology, hermeneutics, aesthetics, the philosophy of mind, the philosophy of language, and the philosophy of action.Template:Sfn[1]

Early life and education

Charles Margrave Taylor was born in Montreal, Quebec, on November 5, 1931, to a Roman Catholic Francophone mother and a Protestant Anglophone father by whom he was raised bilingually.Template:Sfnm[2] His father, Walter Margrave Taylor, was a steel magnate originally from Toronto while his mother, Simone Marguerite Beaubien, was a dressmaker.Template:Sfn His sister was Gretta Chambers.[3]

He attended Selwyn House School from 1939 to 1946,[4][5] followed by Trinity College School from 1946 to 1949,[6] and began his undergraduate education at McGill University where he received a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in history in 1952.Template:Sfn He continued his studies at the University of Oxford, first as a Rhodes Scholar at Balliol College, receiving a BA degree with first-class honours in philosophy, politics and economics in 1955, and then as a postgraduate student, receiving a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1961[7]Template:Sfn under the supervision of Sir Isaiah Berlin.Template:Sfn As an undergraduate student, he started one of the first campaigns to ban thermonuclear weapons in the United Kingdom in 1956,Template:Sfn serving as the first president of the Oxford Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.Template:Sfn Recent research has explored Taylor's engagement with socialist politics during this time.[8]

Career

He succeeded John Plamenatz as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University of Oxford and became a fellow of All Souls College.Template:Sfnm

For many years, both before and after Oxford, he was Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at McGill University in Montreal, where he is now professor emeritus.[9] Taylor was also a Board of Trustees Professor of Law and Philosophy at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, for several years after his retirement from McGill.

Taylor was elected a foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1986.Template:Sfn In 1991, Taylor was appointed to the Conseil de la langue française in the province of Quebec, at which point he critiqued Quebec's commercial sign laws. In 1995, he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada. In 2000, he was made a Grand Officer of the National Order of Quebec.

In 2007 he and Gérard Bouchard were appointed to head a one-year commission of inquiry into what would constitute reasonable accommodation for minority cultures in his home province of Quebec.[10]

Awards

In 1997 he was awarded the Hegel Prize.[11] In 2003, he was awarded the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council's Gold Medal for Achievement in Research, which had been the council's highest honour.[12][13] He was awarded the 2007 Templeton Prize for progress towards research or discoveries about spiritual realities, which included a cash award of US$1.5 million. In June 2008, he was awarded the Kyoto Prize in the arts and philosophy category. The Kyoto Prize is sometimes referred to as the Japanese Nobel.[14] In 2015, he was awarded the John W. Kluge Prize for Achievement in the Study of Humanity, a prize he shared with philosopher Jürgen Habermas.[15] In 2016, he was awarded the inaugural $1-million Berggruen Prize for being "a thinker whose ideas are of broad significance for shaping human self-understanding and the advancement of humanity".[16]

Views

Despite his extensive and diverse philosophical oeuvre,Template:Sfn Taylor famously calls himself a "monomaniac,"Template:Sfnm concerned with only one fundamental aspiration: to develop a convincing philosophical anthropology.

In order to understand Taylor's views, it is helpful to understand his philosophical background, especially his writings on Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Taylor rejects naturalism and formalist epistemology. He is part of an influential intellectual tradition of Canadian idealism that includes John Watson, George Paxton Young, C. B. Macpherson, and George Grant.Template:SfnScript error: No such module "Unsubst".

In his essay "To Follow a Rule," Taylor explores why people can fail to follow rules, and what kind of knowledge it is that allows a person to successfully follow a rule, such as the arrow on a sign. The intellectualist tradition presupposes that to follow directions, we must know a set of propositions and premises about how to follow directions.Template:Sfn

Taylor argues that Wittgenstein's solution is that all interpretation of rules draws upon a tacit background. This background is not more rules or premises, but what Wittgenstein calls "forms of life." More specifically, Wittgenstein says in the Philosophical Investigations that "Obeying a rule is a practice." Taylor situates the interpretation of rules within the practices that are incorporated into our bodies in the form of habits, dispositions and tendencies.Template:Sfn

Following Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Michael Polanyi, and Wittgenstein, Taylor argues that it is mistaken to presuppose that our understanding of the world is primarily mediated by representations. It is only against an unarticulated background that representations can make sense to us. On occasion we do follow rules by explicitly representing them to ourselves, but Taylor reminds us that rules do not contain the principles of their own application: application requires that we draw on an unarticulated understanding or "sense of things" — the background.Template:Sfn

Taylor's critique of naturalism

Taylor defines naturalism as a family of various, often quite diverse theories that all hold "the ambition to model the study of man on the natural sciences."Template:Sfn Philosophically, naturalism was largely popularized and defended by the unity of science movement that was advanced by logical positivist philosophy. In many ways, Taylor's early philosophy springs from a critical reaction against the logical positivism and naturalism that was ascendant in Oxford while he was a student.

Initially, much of Taylor's philosophical work consisted of careful conceptual critiques of various naturalist research programs. This began with his 1964 dissertation The Explanation of Behaviour, which was a detailed and systematic criticism of the behaviourist psychology of B. F. SkinnerTemplate:Sfn that was highly influential at mid-century.

From there, Taylor also spread his critique to other disciplines. The essay "Interpretation and the Sciences of Man" was published in 1972 as a critique of the political science of the behavioural revolution advanced by giants of the field like David Easton, Robert Dahl, Gabriel Almond, and Sydney Verba.Template:Sfn In an essay entitled "The Significance of Significance: The Case for Cognitive Psychology", Taylor criticized the naturalism he saw distorting the major research program that had replaced B. F. Skinner's behaviourism.Template:Sfn

But Taylor also detected naturalism in fields where it was not immediately apparent. For example, in 1978's "Language and Human Nature" he found naturalist distortions in various modern "designative" theories of language,Template:Sfn while in Sources of the Self (1989) he found both naturalist error and the deep moral, motivational sources for this outlookTemplate:Clarification needed in various individualist and utilitarian conceptions of selfhood.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Taylor and hermeneutics

File:Charles Taylor.jpg
Taylor in 2012

Concurrent to Taylor's critique of naturalism was his development of an alternative. Indeed, Taylor's mature philosophy begins when as a doctoral student at Oxford he turned away, disappointed, from analytic philosophy in search of other philosophical resources which he found in French and German modern hermeneutics and phenomenology.[17]

The hermeneutic tradition develops a view of human understanding and cognition as centred on the decipherment of meanings (as opposed to, say, foundational theories of brute verification or an apodictic rationalism). Taylor's own philosophical outlook can broadly and fairly be characterized as hermeneutic and has been called engaged hermeneutics.Template:Sfn This is clear in his championing of the works of major figures within the hermeneutic tradition such as Wilhelm Dilthey, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and Gadamer.Template:Sfn It is also evident in his own original contributions to hermeneutic and interpretive theory.Template:Sfn

Communitarian critique of liberalism

Taylor (as well as Alasdair MacIntyre, Michael Walzer, and Michael Sandel) is associated with a communitarian critique of liberal theory's understanding of the "self". Communitarians emphasize the importance of social institutions in the development of individual meaning and identity.

In his 1991 Massey Lecture The Malaise of Modernity, Taylor argued that political theorists—from John Locke and Thomas Hobbes to John Rawls and Ronald Dworkin—have neglected the way in which individuals arise within the context supplied by societies. A more realistic understanding of the "self" recognizes the social background against which life choices gain importance and meaning.

Philosophy and sociology of religion

Script error: No such module "labelled list hatnote". Taylor's later work has turned to the philosophy of religion, as evident in several pieces, including the lecture "A Catholic Modernity" and the short monograph "Varieties of Religion Today: William James Revisited".Template:Sfnm

Taylor's most significant contribution in this field to date is his book A Secular Age which argues against the secularization thesis of Max Weber, Steve Bruce, and others.Template:Sfn In rough form, the secularization thesis holds that as modernity (a bundle of phenomena including science, technology, and rational forms of authority) progresses, religion gradually diminishes in influence. Taylor begins from the fact that the modern world has not seen the disappearance of religion but rather its diversification and in many places its growth.Template:Sfn He then develops a complex alternative notion of what secularization actually means given that the secularization thesis has not been borne out. In the process, Taylor also greatly deepens his account of moral, political, and spiritual modernity that he had begun in Sources of the Self.

Politics

Taylor was a candidate for the social democratic New Democratic Party (NDP) in Mount Royal on three occasions in the 1960s, beginning with the 1962 federal election when he came in third behind Liberal Alan MacNaughton. He improved his standing in 1963, coming in second. Most famously, he also lost in the 1965 election to newcomer and future prime minister, Pierre Trudeau. This campaign garnered national attention. Taylor's fourth and final attempt to enter the House of Commons of Canada was in the 1968 federal election, when he came in second as an NDP candidate in the riding of Dollard. In 1994 he coedited a paper on human rights with Vitit Muntarbhorn in Thailand.Template:Sfn

Taylor served as a vice president of the federal NDP (beginning Template:Circa)Template:Sfn and was president of its Quebec section.Template:Sfnm

In 2010, Taylor said multiculturalism was a work in progress that faced challenges. He identified tackling Islamophobia in Canada as the next challenge.[18]

In his 2020 book Reconstructing Democracy he, together with Patrizia Nanz and Madeleine Beaubien Taylor, uses local examples to describe how democracies in transformation might be revitalized by involving citizenship.Template:Sfn

Interlocutors

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Published works

Books

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  • Multiculturalism and "The Politics of Recognition". Edited by Gutmann, Amy. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. 1992.Template:Efn
  • Script error: No such module "Lang". [Reconciling the Solitudes: Writings on Canadian Federalism and Nationalism] (in French). Edited by Laforest, Guy. Sainte-Foy, Quebec: Les Presses de l'Université Laval. 1992.
    • English translation: Reconciling the Solitudes: Essays on Canadian Federalism and Nationalism. Edited by Laforest, Guy. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. 1993.
  • Road to Democracy: Human Rights and Human Development in Thailand. With Muntarbhorn, Vitit. Montreal: International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development. 1994.
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  • Script error: No such module "Lang". (in French). Translated by de Lara, Philippe. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. 1997.
  • A Catholic Modernity? Edited by Heft, James L. New York: Oxford University Press. 1999.
  • Script error: No such module "Lang". [Invoking Civil Society] (in Serbo-Croatian). Edited by Savic, Obrad.
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  • Script error: No such module "Lang". (in French). With Maclure, Jocelyn. Montreal: Boréal. 2010.
    • English translation: Secularism and Freedom of Conscience. With Maclure, Jocelyn. Translated by Todd, Jane Marie. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 2011.
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  • Church and People: Disjunctions in a Secular Age. Edited with Casanova, José; McLean, George F. Washington: Council for Research in Values and Philosophy. 2012.
  • Script error: No such module "Lang". / Republican Democracy. Edited by Cristi, Renato; Tranjan, J. Ricardo. Santiago: LOM Ediciones. 2012.
  • Boundaries of Toleration. Edited with Stepan, Alfred C. New York: Columbia University Press. 2014.
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  • Script error: No such module "Lang". (in Italian). Edited and translated by Costa, Paolo. Parma, Italy: Diabasis. 2014.
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  • Retrieving Realism. With Dreyfus, Hubert. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 2015.
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  • Reconstructing Democracy. How Citizens Are Building from the Ground Up. With Nanz, Patrizia; Beaubien Taylor, Madeleine. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 2020
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Selected book chapters

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See also

Notes

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References

Footnotes

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Works cited

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Further reading

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  • Braak, Andre van der. Reimagining Zen in a Secular age: Charles Taylor and Zen Buddhism in the West (Brill Rodopi, 2020) online review
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External links

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Online videos of Charles Taylor
Template:S-acaTemplate:S-achTemplate:S-breakTemplate:S-endTemplate:NavboxesTemplate:Portal barTemplate:Authority control
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Chichele Professor of
Social and Political Theory

1976–1981 Template:S-ttl/check
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1991 Template:S-ttl/check
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at Stanford University

1991–1992 Template:S-ttl/check
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1998–1999 Template:S-ttl/check
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2009 Template:S-ttl/check
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2017 Template:S-ttl/check
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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Molson Prize
1991
With: Denys Arcand Template:S-ttl/check
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1992 Template:S-ttl/check
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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Marianist Award for Intellectual Contributions
1996 Template:S-ttl/check
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2003 Template:S-ttl/check
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2007 Template:S-ttl/check
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2008 Template:S-ttl/check
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2015
With: Jürgen Habermas Template:S-ttl/check
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New award Berggruen Prize
2016 Template:S-ttl/check
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International Literary Grand Prize

2019 Template:S-ttl/check
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2019
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  2. "How To Restore Your Faith In Democracy". The New Yorker.
  3. "History Through Our Eyes: Sept. 5, 1991, the Chambers task force". Montreal Gazette.
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  5. Selwyn House School Yearbook 1946
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  17. "Interview with Charles Taylor: The Malaise of Modernity" by David Cayley,
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