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British philosopher (1896–1958) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Dewar "Harry" Weldon MC (5 December 1896 – 13 May 1958) was a British philosopher.
Thomas Dewar Weldon | |
---|---|
Born | 5 December 1896 Marylebone, London |
Died | 13 May 1958 Oxford |
Nationality | British |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
Notable students | Wilfrid Sellars |
Main interests | Ethics |
Thomas Weldon was born at 3 Bryanston Mansions, York Street, Marylebone, London, in 1896. After an education at Tonbridge School, he won a scholarship to read Literae humaniores at Magdalen College, Oxford, which he postponed to become an officer in the Royal Field Artillery in 1915. He spent World War I in France and Belgium, rising to acting captain, being wounded and winning the Military Cross and bar. He finally went up to Oxford in 1919, graduating with a first class degree in 1921. Weldon was elected a fellow and philosophy tutor at his college two years later, getting to know C. S. Lewis. He then served as Rhodes travelling fellow in 1930.
During World War II, he was a temporary civil servant in London from 1939 to 1942, then Personal Staff Officer to "Bomber Harris" in RAF Bomber Command at High Wycombe from 1942 to 1945. His final duties there involved justifying Harris's controversial bombing strategy to politicians and the public.
His death in 1958 was attributed by college rumour to suicide but was in fact due to a cerebral haemorrhage.[1]
In a review in the London Review of Books of a newly published work by Niall Ferguson, R. W. Johnson said that it amounted to a tutorial: "The idea is to teach the young to think and argue, and the real past masters at it (Harry Weldon was always held up as an example to me) were those who first argued undergraduates out of their received opinions, then turned around after a time and argued them out of their new-found radicalism, leaving them mystified as to what they believed and suspended in a free-floating state of cleverness."
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