Sir Alfred Jules "Freddie" Ayer  (;"Ayer".
Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. 29 October 1910 – 27 June 1989), usually cited as A. J. Ayer, was an English philosopher known for his promotion of logical positivism, particularly in his books Language, Truth, and Logic (1936) and The Problem of Knowledge (1956).
He was educated at Eton College and the University of Oxford, after which he studied the philosophy of logical positivism at the University of Vienna.
From 1933 to 1940 he lectured on philosophy at Christ Church, Oxford.
During the Second World War Ayer was a Special Operations Executive and MI6 agent.
He was Grote Professor of the Philosophy of Mind and Logic at University College London from 1946 until 1959, after which he returned to Oxford to become Wykeham Professor of Logic at New College.
He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1951 to 1952 and knighted in 1970.
He was known for his advocacy of humanism, and was the second President of the British Humanist Association (now known as Humanists UK).
Life
Ayer was born in St John's Wood, in north west London, to Jules Louis Cyprien Ayer and Reine (née Citroen), wealthy parents from continental Europe.
His mother was from the Dutch-Jewish family who founded the Citroën car company in France; his father was a Swiss Calvinist financier who worked for the Rothschild family, including for their bank and as secretary to Alfred Rothschild.
Ayer was educated at Ascham St Vincent's School, a former boarding preparatory school for boys in the seaside town of Eastbourne in Sussex, in which he started boarding at the comparatively early age of seven for reasons to do with the First World War, and Eton College.
It was at Eton that Ayer first became known for his characteristic bravado and precocity.
Although primarily interested in furthering his intellectual pursuits, he was very keen on sports, particularly rugby, and reputedly played the Eton Wall Game very well.
In the final examinations at Eton, Ayer came second in his year, and first in classics.
In his final year, as a member of Eton's senior council, he unsuccessfully campaigned for the abolition of corporal punishment at the school.
He won a classics scholarship to Christ Church, Oxford.
After graduation from Oxford, Ayer spent a year in Vienna, returned to England and published his first book, Language, Truth and Logic in 1936.
The first exposition in English of logical positivism as newly developed by the Vienna Circle, this made Ayer at age 26 the 'enfant terrible' of British philosophy.
In the Second World War he served as an officer in the Welsh Guards, chiefly in intelligence (Special Operations Executive (SOE) and MI6).
Ayer was commissioned second lieutenant into the Welsh Guards from Officer Cadet Training Unit on 21 September 1940.
After the war, he briefly returned to the University of Oxford where he became a fellow and Dean of Wadham College.
He thereafter taught philosophy at London University from 1946 until 1959, when he also started to appear on radio and television.
He was an extrovert and social mixer who liked dancing and attending the clubs in London and New York.
He was also obsessed with sport: he had played rugby for Eton, and was a noted cricketer and a keen supporter of Tottenham Hotspur football team, where he was for many years a season ticket holder.Radio Times article by Tim Heald, 20–26 August 1977 For an academic, Ayer was an unusually well-connected figure in his time, with close links to 'high society' and the establishment.
Presiding over Oxford high-tables, he is often described as charming, but at times he could also be intimidating.
Ayer was married four times to three women.
His first marriage was from 1932–1941 to (Grace Isabel) Renée (d. 1980), with whom he had a son - alleged to be in fact the son of Ayer's friend and colleague, philosopher Stuart Hampshire- and a daughter.
Renée subsequently married Stuart Hampshire.
In 1960 he married Alberta Constance (Dee) Wells, with whom he had one son.
Ayer's marriage to Wells was dissolved in 1983 and that same year he married Vanessa Salmon, former wife of politician Nigel Lawson.
She died in 1985 and in 1989 he remarried Dee Wells, who survived him.
Ayer also had a daughter with Hollywood columnist Sheilah Graham Westbrook.
From 1959 to his retirement in 1978, Sir Alfred held the Wykeham Chair, Professor of Logic at Oxford.
He was knighted in 1970.
After his retirement, Ayer taught or lectured several times in the United States, including serving as a visiting professor at Bard College in the fall of 1987.
At a party that same year held by fashion designer Fernando Sanchez, Ayer, then 77, confronted Mike Tyson who was forcing himself upon the (then) little-known model Naomi Campbell.
When Ayer demanded that Tyson stop, the boxer reportedly asked, "Do you know who the fuck I am?
I'm the heavyweight champion of the world," to which Ayer replied, "And I am the former Wykeham Professor of Logic.
We are both pre-eminent in our field.
I suggest that we talk about this like rational men".
Ayer and Tyson then began to talk, allowing Campbell to slip out.Rogers (1999), p. 344.
Ayer was also involved in politics being involved in anti-Vietnam War activism, supporting the Labour Party (and then later the Social Democratic Party), Chairman of the Campaign Against Racial Discrimination in Sport, and President of the Homosexual Law Reform Society.
In 1988, a year before his death, Ayer wrote an article entitled, "What I saw when I was dead",Ayer, A. J. (28 August 1988).
"What I Saw When I Was Dead".
The Sunday Telegraph.
Reprinted as "The Undiscovered Country" in The Meaning Of Life (1990) and The Philosophy of A. J. Ayer (1992) describing an unusual near-death experience.
Of the experience, Ayer first said that it "slightly weakened my conviction that my genuine death ... will be the end of me, though I continue to hope that it will be."
However, a few weeks later he revised this, saying "what I should have said is that my experiences have weakened, not my belief that there is no life after death, but my inflexible attitude towards that belief".Ayer, A. J. (15 October 1988).
"POSTSCRIPT TO A POSTMORTEM".
The Spectator.
Archived from the original on 12 March 2018.
Reprinted in The Meaning Of Life (1990) and The Philosophy of A. J. Ayer (1992)
Ayer died on 27 June 1989.
From 1980 to 1989 Ayer lived at 51 York Street, Marylebone, where a memorial plaque was unveiled on 19 November 1995.
Philosophical ideas
In Language, Truth and Logic (1936), Ayer presents the verification principle as the only valid basis for philosophy.
Unless logical or empirical verification is possible, statements like "God exists" or "charity is good" are not true or untrue but meaningless, and may thus be excluded or ignored.
Religious language in particular was unverifiable and as such literally nonsense.
He also criticises C. A. Mace's opinion"Representation and Expression," Analysis, Vol.1, No.3; "Metaphysics and Emotive Language," Analysis Vol. II, nos.
1 and 2, that metaphysics is a form of intellectual poetry.Ayer A. J. Language, Truth and Logic 1946/1952, New York/Dover The stance that a belief in "God" denotes no verifiable hypothesis is sometimes referred to as igtheism (for example, by Paul Kurtz).
In later years Ayer reiterated that he did not believe in God"I do not believe in God.
It seems to me that theists of all kinds have very largely failed to make their concept of a deity intelligible; and to the extent that they have made it intelligible, they have given us no reason to think that anything answers to it."
Ayer, A.J. (1966).
"What I Believe," Humanist, Vol.81 (8) August, p. 226.
and began to refer to himself as an atheist."
I trust that my remaining an atheist will allay the anxieties of my fellow supporters of the British Humanist Association, the Rationalist Press Association and the South Place Ethical Society." (Ayer 1989, p. 12)
He followed in the footsteps of Bertrand Russell by debating with the Jesuit scholar Frederick Copleston on the topic of religion.
Ayer's version of emotivism divides "the ordinary system of ethics" into four classes:
"Propositions that express definitions of ethical terms, or judgements about the legitimacy or possibility of certain definitions"
"Propositions describing the phenomena of moral experience, and their causes"
"Exhortations to moral virtue"
"Actual ethical judgments"Ayer, Language, 103
He focuses on propositions of the first class—moral judgments—saying that those of the second class belong to science, those of the third are mere commands, and those of the fourth (which are considered in normative ethics as opposed to meta-ethics) are too concrete for ethical philosophy.
Ayer argues that moral judgments cannot be translated into non-ethical, empirical terms and thus cannot be verified; in this he agrees with ethical intuitionists.
But he differs from intuitionists by discarding appeals to intuition of non-empirical moral truths as "worthless"Ayer, Language, 106 since the intuition of one person often contradicts that of another.
Instead, Ayer concludes that ethical concepts are "mere pseudo-concepts":
Between 1945 and 1947, together with Russell and George Orwell, he contributed a series of articles to Polemic, a short-lived British "Magazine of Philosophy, Psychology, and Aesthetics" edited by the ex-Communist Humphrey Slater.
Ayer was closely associated with the British humanist movement.
He was an Honorary Associate of the Rationalist Press Association from 1947 until his death.
He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1963.
In 1965, he became the first president of the Agnostics' Adoption Society and in the same year succeeded Julian Huxley as president of the British Humanist Association, a post he held until 1970.
In 1968 he edited The Humanist Outlook, a collection of essays on the meaning of humanism.
In addition he was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto.
Works
Ayer is best known for popularising the verification principle, in particular through his presentation of it in Language, Truth, and Logic (1936).
The principle was at the time at the heart of the debates of the so-called Vienna Circle which Ayer visited as a young guest.
Others, including the leading light of the circle, Moritz Schlick, were already offering their own papers on the issue.
Ayer's own formulation was that a sentence can be meaningful only if it has verifiable empirical import;  otherwise, it is either "analytical" if tautologous or "metaphysical" (i.e. meaningless, or "literally senseless").
He started to work on the book at the age of 23Language, Truth and Logic, Penguin, 2001, p. ix and it was published when he was 26.
Ayer's philosophical ideas were deeply influenced by those of the Vienna Circle and David Hume.
His clear, vibrant and polemical exposition of them makes Language, Truth and Logic essential reading on the tenets of logical empiricism;  the book is regarded as a classic of 20th century analytic philosophy, and is widely read in philosophy courses around the world.
In it, Ayer also proposed that the distinction between a conscious man and an unconscious machine resolves itself into a distinction between "different types of perceptible behaviour",Language, Truth and Logic, Penguin, 2001, p. 140 an argument that anticipates the Turing test published in 1950 to test a machine's capability to demonstrate intelligence.
Ayer wrote two books on the philosopher Bertrand Russell, Russell and Moore: The Analytic Heritage (1971) and Russell (1972).
He also wrote an introductory book on the philosophy of David Hume and a short biography of Voltaire.
Ayer was a strong critic of the German philosopher Martin Heidegger.
As a logical positivist Ayer was in conflict with Heidegger's proposed vast, overarching theories regarding existence.
These he felt were completely unverifiable through empirical demonstration and logical analysis, and this sort of philosophy an unfortunate strain in modern thought.
He considered Heidegger to be the worst example of such philosophy, which Ayer believed to be entirely useless.
In Philosophy in the Twentieth Century (1982) Ayer accuses Heidegger of "surprising ignorance" or "unscrupulous distortion" and "what can fairly be described as charlatanism."
In 1972–1973 Ayer gave the Gifford Lectures at University of St Andrews, later published as The Central Questions of Philosophy.
In the preface to the book, he defends his selection to hold the lectureship on the basis that Lord Gifford wished to promote "natural theology", in the widest sense of that term", and that non-believers are allowed to give the lectures if they are "able reverent men, true thinkers, sincere lovers of and earnest inquirers after truth".The Central Questions of Philosophy, p. ix He still believed in the viewpoint he shared with the logical positivists: that large parts of what was traditionally called "philosophy"including the whole of metaphysics, theology and aestheticswere not matters that could be judged as being true or false and that it was thus meaningless to discuss them.
In The Concept of a Person and Other Essays (1963), Ayer heavily criticized Wittgenstein's private language argument.
Ayer's sense-data theory in Foundations of Empirical Knowledge was famously criticised by fellow Oxonian J. L. Austin in Sense and Sensibilia, a landmark 1950s work of common language philosophy.
Ayer responded to this in the essay "Has Austin Refuted the Sense-datum Theory?", which can be found in his Metaphysics and Common Sense (1969).
Awards
He was awarded a Knighthood as Knight Bachelor in the London Gazette on 1 January 1970.
Selected publications
1936, Language, Truth, and Logic, London: Gollancz.
(2nd ed., 1946.)
Reprinted 2001 with a new introduction, London: Penguin.
1940, The Foundations of Empirical Knowledge, London: Macmillan.
1954, Philosophical Essays, London: Macmillan.
(Essays on freedom, phenomenalism, basic propositions, utilitarianism, other minds, the past, ontology.)
1957, "The conception of probability as a logical relation", in S. Korner, ed., Observation and Interpretation in the Philosophy of Physics, New York, N.Y.: Dover Publications.
1956, The Problem of Knowledge, London: Macmillan.
1957, "Logical Positivism - A Debate"  (with F. C. Copleston) in: Edwards, Paul, Pap, Arthur (eds.), A Modern Introduction to Philosophy; readings from classical and contemporary sourcesreprinted in Ayer, A. J., (1990) The Meaning of Life and Other Essays, the same being reviewed (with attention given to the Ayer/Copleston debate) in: McGinn, Colin (30 August 1990).
"Old Scores".
London Review of Books.
12 (16).
1963, The Concept of a Person and Other Essays, London: Macmillan.
(Essays on truth, privacy and private languages, laws of nature, the concept of a person, probability.)
1967, "Has Austin Refuted the Sense-Data Theory?"
Synthese vol.
XVIII, pp.
117–140.
(Reprinted in Ayer 1969).
1968, The Origins of Pragmatism, London: Macmillan.
1969, Metaphysics and Common Sense, London: Macmillan.
(Essays on knowledge, man as a subject for science, chance, philosophy and politics, existentialism, metaphysics, and a reply to Austin on sense-data theory [Ayer 1967].)
1971, Russell and Moore: The Analytical Heritage, London: Macmillan.
1972, Probability and Evidence, London: Macmillan.
1972, Russell, London: Fontana Modern Masters.
1973, The Central Questions of Philosophy, London: Weidenfeld.
1977, Part of My Life, London: Collins.
1979, "Replies", in G. F. Macdonald, ed., Perception and Identity: Essays Presented to A. J. Ayer, With His Replies, London: Macmillan; Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.McDonald (1979) also includes a detailed listing of Ayer's philosophical works
1980, Hume, Oxford: Oxford University Press
1982, Philosophy in the Twentieth Century, London: Weidenfeld.
1984, Freedom and Morality and Other Essays, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
1984, More of My Life, London: Collins.
1986, Ludwig Wittgenstein, London: Penguin.
1986, Voltaire, New York: Random House.
1988, Thomas Paine, London: Secker & Warburg.
1990, The Meaning of Life and Other Essays, Weidenfeld & Nicolson.Reviewed in: McGinn, Colin (30 August 1990).
"Old Scores".
London Review of Books.
12 (16).
1991, "A Defense of Empiricism" in: Griffiths, A. Phillips (ed.), A. J. Ayer: Memorial Essays (Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements).
Cambridge University Press.Phillips (1991) also includes a 1989 interview with Ayer conducted by Ted Hondereich
1992, "Intellectual Autobiography" and Repiies in: Lewis Edwin Hahn (ed.), The Philosophy of A.J. Ayer (The Library of Living Philosophers Volume XXI), edited by Lewis Edwin Hahn, Open Court Publishing Co.Hahn (1992) also includes a comprehensive 27-page bibliography of Ayer's writings compiled by Guida Crowley.
See also
A priori knowledge
List of British philosophers
References
Footnotes
Works cited
Ayer, A.J. (1989).
"That undiscovered country", New Humanist, Vol. 104 (1), May, pp.
10–13.
Rogers, Ben (1999).
A.J. Ayer: A Life.
New York: Grove Press. .
(Chapter one and a review by Hilary Spurling, The New York Times, 24 December 2000.)
Further reading
Jim Holt, "Positive Thinking" (review of Karl Sigmund, Exact Thinking in Demented Times:  The Vienna Circle and the Epic Quest for the Foundations of Science, Basic Books, 449 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXIV, no. 20 (21 December 2017), pp.
74–76.
Ted Honderich, Ayer's Philosophy and its Greatness.
Anthony Quinton, Alfred Jules Ayer.
Proceedings of the British Academy, 94 (1996), pp.
255–282.
Graham Macdonald, Alfred Jules Ayer, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 7 May 2005.
External links
"Logical Positivism" (video) Men of Ideas interview with Bryan Magee (1978)
"Frege, Russell, and Modern Logic" (video) The Great Philosophers interview with Bryan Magee (1987)
Ayer's Elizabeth Rathbone Lecture on Philosophy & Politics
Ayer entry in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
A.J. Ayer: Out of time by Alex Callinicos
Appearance on Desert Island Discs - 3 August 1984
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