Papers of Alfred Cyril Ewing

Scope and Content

Pears of the British philosopher Alfred Cyril Ewing.

The papers present a fragmentary view of Ewing's activities as an academic philosopher. His set of notebooks (ACE/1) seem reasonably complete, and include research notes from his period as a postgraduate student at Oxford through to the early 1970s. They also include some travel notebooks, compiled by Ewing during trips to U.S.A., Europe, India and Israel, which comment on academic and other matters.

There is a small body of correspondence (ACE/2), including an interesting series of letters from Ewing's friend, Henry Habberley Price, professor of logic at Oxford. These letters deal with various philosophical topics, including Kant's philosophy, philosophical theism, political philosophy and conceptions of the good. There are also letters from the philosophers, George Stout, Alan Stout, A E Taylor, J H Muirhead, Bill Kneale, William Pepperell Montague, Norman Kemp Smith, C A Campbell, and Errol Harris; some of these discuss Idealist philosophy and Ewing's writings on the subject. Also present are letters of a more personal nature from family and friends.

ACE/3 comprises copies of Ewing's published articles as offprints, as well as manuscript/typescript drafts of lectures and articles, some apparently unpublished. These demonstrate the development of Ewing's ideas and the range of his philosophical interests. There is also a typescript of a large section of Value and reality (ACE/3/76). A small collection of miscellanea (ACE/4) includes Ewing's heavily annotated copy of Idealism, testimonials provided for Ewing, and a small number of personal and family photographs.

Administrative / Biographical History

Alfred Cyril Ewing was born in Leicester on 11 May 1899, the only child of H F Ewing, a shoe retailer, and his wife Emma. He was educated at Wyggeston Grammar School, Leicester, and University College, Oxford. He took a first in classics and was awarded several prizes and scholarships. In 1923 he received his doctorate, and his thesis was published as Kant's treatment of causality (1924). Ewing was also appointed a Doctor of Letters by the University of Cambridge in 1933.

Following Oxford, Ewing held temporary lectureships at the University of Michigan and at Armstrong College, Newcastle. From 1927-1931 he was assistant lecturer in philosophy at University College, Swansea. In 1931 Ewing was appointed lecturer in moral sciences at Cambridge, and promoted to a readership in 1954. He had hoped to succeed C.D. Broad as Knightsbridge professor of moral philosophy in 1953, but in the event this chair went to R.B. Braithwaite. He was also a visiting professor at various times at Princeton, Northwestern University, the University of South California, the University of Colorado, and the University of Delaware.

As a philosopher, Ewing had built an early reputation as an astute and sympathetic critic of philosophical Idealism, as demonstrated in his Idealism (1934), which has been considered one of the best treatments of the subject. Despite his criticisms of Idealism, Ewing felt little sympathy either for the linguistic philosophy of Wittgenstein and his followers, or for logical positivism, two schools which were to dominate British philosophy in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Against the trend, Ewing continued to find value in the ethical theories of G E Moore, and was a trenchant, if largely unregarded, critic of the new trends in academic philosophy. He criticised logical positivism in the articles 'Meaninglessness' (1937) and 'The linguistic theory of a priori propositions' (1940). Some of his papers on the subject were collected and published as Non-linguistic philosophy in 1968, which demonstrated Ewing's consistently critical view of philosophy conceived of as essentially a linguistic dispute about meaning.

It was a characteristic of Ewing's philosophical approach to develop synthetic resolutions to competing theories, and this was particularly evident in his treatment of ethics. He wrote several works on ethics including The definition of the good (1947), Second thoughts in moral philosophy (1959), as well as a popular introduction Ethics (1953), which went through many impressions. Ewing took an objectivist view of moral judgment, but tried to make common ground with those who did not. In the latter part of his life, Ewing became increasingly sympathetic to philosophical theism, expounding his views in a late work, Value and reality (1973).

As a philosopher, Ewing always stood outside the mainstream, and did not achieve the reputation, which had looked likely in his early career. By the time of his death, he was a somewhat marginal figure, but he continued to be held in high regard by sympathetic critics, who appreciated the quality of his writings. Ewing was a very prolific author, writing over a dozen books and many articles. An active figure in professional forums, he was president of the Aristotelian Society in 1941/2, the treasurer of the International Federation of Philosophical Societies from 1953, and an active member of the International Institute of Philosophy. He was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1941.

Ewing never married. After his retirement from Cambridge, he moved to Manchester, where he shared a house with a cousin, Marion Sargent. He died at Manchester on 14 May 1973.

Arrangement

Arranged into series as follows:

  • ACE/1 - Notebooks;
  • ACE/2 - Correspondence;
  • ACE/3 - Draft manuscripts, lectures and offprints;
  • ACE/4 - Miscellaneous

Dating for some items, particularly the notebooks, is approximate only.

Access Information

The collection is open to any accredited reader.

Conditions Governing Use

Photocopies and photographic copies of material in the archive can be supplied for private study purposes only, depending on the condition of the documents.

A number of items within the archive remain within copyright under the terms of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988; it is the responsibility of users to obtain the copyright holder's permission for reproduction of copyright material for purposes other than research or private study.

Prior written permission must be obtained from the Library for publication or reproduction of any material within the archive. Please contact the Head of Special Collections, John Rylands University Library, 150 Deansgate, Manchester, M3 3EH.

Custodial History

The precise custodial history of these papers is not known. It is believed that they were either donated by Ewing shortly before his death in 1973, or else transferred by his executors after his death.

Accruals

No accruals expected.

Related Material

UML also holds papers of the philosophers William Stanley Jevons (JA), Samuel Alexander (ALEX) and Robert Adamson (uncatalogued), although none of these is directly concerned with Ewing or has similar philosophical subject matter.

Bibliography

There is limited information about Ewing's life and work; the fullest account is the obituary by G R Grice in Proceedings of the British Academy, LIX, p.499-513.