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Donald Adamson
British writer and translator / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Donald Adamson (born 30 March 1939 at Culcheth, Lancashire) is a British historian, philosophical writer and literary critic.
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He is the author of Blaise Pascal: Mathematician, Physicist and Thinker about God (1995), a book detailing the concept of the existence of God and a study of Pascal’s Wager.[1]
Adamson has written on French history, and histories of the City of London,[2] a ducal family,[3] travel,[4] finance,[5] and art. He also wrote about the novels of Honoré de Balzac.[6] He has translated many short stories of Guy de Maupassant[7] into English.
Adamson aids the cause of museums and libraries in the UK.[8] From 1983 to 1992 he served as a Justice of the Peace for the City of London.
Adamson studied at the University of Oxford. He taught at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, as well as Paris and London Universities. He also is a member of a Cambridge College where he conducts research.
2012-13 Donald Adamson was Master of the Curriers’ Company, a London Livery Company. He established a Curriers' Co. biennial award for graduates of British universities to write an essay on the history of London, as well as sixteen annual prizes in mathematics and history for pupils aged 14 to 15 at four London Academies.