Angus Kerr-Lawson

Distinguished Professor Emeritus

Angus Kerr-Lawson
Distinguished Professor Emeritus Angus Kerr-Lawson died late June 2011 shortly after his daughters accepted the honour of Distinguished Professor Emeritus on his behalf at the spring convocation.

Professor Kerr-LawsonÌýserved with excellence as a faculty member in both Philosophy and PureÌýMathematics at À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ for nearly 40 years from 1958 to 1996. He took on many crucial roles, serving as Department Chair (Mathematics), Senate Executive Committee, and the University Board of Governors.

Since Angus's retirement, his work in the field of AmericanÌýphilosophy, always respected, has increasingly been recognized as foundational to aspectsÌýof the field. He wasÌýa distinguished, internationally known scholar of the mathematics andÌýlogic of Charles Sanders Peirce, and of the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza. He is best known,Ìýthough, for his extensive work on the philosophy of George Santayana.Ìý

It is no exaggeration to say that Angus was one of the top few living English languageÌýscholars of Santayana. Indeed, it is rare to encounter anÌýEnglish-language book or journal article on Santayana that doesn't engage Angus,Ìýeither by thanking him in the acknowledgements, or by directly focusing its attention on hisÌýwork. Thus the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy honoured Angus for his
contributions to the field in 2008, while the journalÌýTransactions of the Charles S PeirceÌýSocietyÌýpublished a special issue devoted to his work in 2009. Ìý

Angus published a substantial body of peer-reviewed philosophy journalÌýarticles on central figures in 19th and early 20th-century American philosophy. ÌýHe also contributed book chapters on Peirce andÌýSantayana to collections edited by some of the most distinguished living scholars of AmericanÌýphilosophy. Yet the larger componentÌýof his philosophical work appeared elsewhere – ÌýinÌýOverheard in Seville, theÌýbulletin of the Santayana Society, which he himself edited from 1983 to 2006. In this journalÌýhe published 24 articles between 1983 and 2009. ÌýOverheard in SevilleÌýis the primary locusÌýfor scholarship on Santayana. ÌýWithout this journal and Angus's tireless stewardship ofÌýit, Santayana scholarship would be decades behind where it is today.Ìý

Angus was a very fine scholar and a respected member of the university community. HisÌýintellectual generosity and great collegiality will not be forgotten by those fortunate enough to have worked or studied with him.