Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge
Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge (1867, New York – 1940, New York) was a teacher at various American universities. Woodbridge considered himself a naïve realist, deeply impressed with Santayana. He spent much of his career at Columbia University, where a residence hall and a professorship in philosophy are named in his honor. He was editor of the The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods. David and Lillian Swenson, translators of some of the works of Søren Kierkegaard, dedicated Concluding Unscientific Postscript, (1941) to Professor Woodbridge.
Works
- The Purpose of History (1916)
- The Realm of Mind (1926)
- The Son of Apollo: Themes of Plato (1929)
- Nature and Mind: Selected Essays (1937)
- An Essay on Nature (1940)
- Aristotle's Vision of Nature (ed. John H. Randall Jr., 1965)
External links
- Works by or about Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge at Internet Archive
- Works by Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- The Purpose of History Lectures delivered at University of North Carolina 1916
- Metaphysics Columbia University 1908
- Webpage on F.J.E. Woodbridge by J. A. Woodbridge
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