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Macmurray, John

  • CA QUA01832
  • Personne
  • 1891-1976

John Macmurray was born at Maxwellton in the Scottish borders in 1891. He moved (with his family) to Aberdeen at around the age of ten and attended Aberdeen Grammar School and Robert Gordon's College before proceeding to Glasgow University, from which he graduated. After completing his Honours Classics work at Glasgow in September 1913, he follow in the long tradition of Snell Exhibitioners, exceptional Glasgow graduates awarded scholarships to Balliol College, Oxford. There he studied history and philosophy, but his tutor, the philosopher A.D. Lindsay, helped strengthen his interest in philosophy by bringing him to see it as a preparation for life and service.

During the First World War Macmurray served with the British army in France, first with the Royal Army Medical Corps and later as a lieutenant with the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders with whom he was awarded a Military Cross, 1918. Early in 1917, he wrote his first known published piece of writing, a short reflection on a soldier's image of God in the midst of the carnage at the front, called ‘Trench Religion', which was published in a book edited by Prof David Cairns entitled The Army and Religion , 1919. That same year (1919) he returned to Balliol where his academic career properly began with his appointment to the John Locke Scholarship, graduating M.A. with distinction in litterae humaniores .

His first academic post was a lectureship in philosophy at Manchester University, but before long he accepted an invitation to become Professor of Philosophy at Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg. His time in South Africa lasted only eighteen months before he returned to Oxford and to Balliol as Jowett Lecturer and Classical Tutor, a position he held from 1922 to 1928. In 1928 he moved again, this time to become a professor of philosophy at London University College, succeeding Dawes-Hicks in the position of Grote Professor of Mind and Logic. There he remained until 1944 when he finally returned to Scotland as Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh in succession to A E Taylor, who had also preceded him at Manchester.

Macmurray remained largely outwith the fashions of professional British philosophy, and partly for this reason his identification as a philosopher in the Scottish tradition is questionable. But one aspect of the kind of philosophy he learnt at Glasgow persisted throughout his career, namely the belief that philosophy should address itself to broader human concerns and be practised in a wider cultural context than simply that of professional colleagues. As a result, his work received wide public recognition from his numerous writings, and especially his radio broadcasts of the 1930s. It is also true that from the Chair of Moral Philosophy at Edinburgh he influenced the life and thought of successive generations of students. His conception of philosophy and its affinity with Scottish intellectual traditions is most evident in the Gifford Lectures he gave at the University of Glasgow in 1953.

Macmurray retired from the Chair of Moral Philosophy at Edinburgh in 1957. Having for most of his life been a somewhat reluctant Christian, in retirement he became a member of the Society of Friends. He died in 1976.

Source: ‘The life and Thought of John Macmurray' by Jack Costello, in John Macmurray: Critical Perspectives , (eds.) David Fergusson and Nigel Dower.

Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion

  • CA QUA01835
  • Collectivité
  • 1971-

The Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion is a consortium of academic societies in the field of Religious Studies: Canadian Society for the Study of Religion, Canadian Society of Biblical Studies, Canadian Society of Patristic Studies, Canadian Theological Society, Societé canadienne de théologie, and Societé québécoise pour l'étude de la religion. The Corporation was founded for the purpose of "publishing a journal and other materials to serve the needs of scholars working in both the French and English languages in Canada in all fields of the academic study of religion."

Since its inception in 1971, the Corporation has published the journal Studies in Religion / Sciences Religieuses.

Macdonald, Lady Susan Agnes Bernard

  • CA QUA01837
  • Personne
  • 1836-1920

Susan Agnes Bernard was born in Jamaica in 1836. She married John A. Macdonald in 1867 and they had one child, Mary, born in 1869. On 14 August 1891 she was created Baroness Macdonald of Earnscliffe, a title she held until her death in 1920.

Ettinger, George Harold

  • CA QUA01840
  • Personne
  • 1896-1992

Doctor, academic, Dean of Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, ON.

Canada West. Provincial Secretary's Office

  • CA QUA01844
  • Collectivité
  • n.d.

At the union of Upper and Lower Canada in 1841, the division of responsibilities between the offices of Civil Secretary and of Provincial Secretary and registrar was clarified, confirming an evolutionary trend. Where the Civil Secretary had been the principal channel of communication for the government before the Union, after 1841 the Provincial Secretary's office was the focus. This evolution in the bureaucracy paralleled and reflected the development of responsible government in the political arena.

While the office of the Civil Secretary to the Governor was unified in 1841, that of the Provincial Secretary and Registrar continued a separation based on geography. The old territory of Lower Canada was now termed Canada East and the old Upper Canada, Canada West. Parallel record-keeping systems were established by the Provincial Secretaries, using a numbered file registry system.

Queen's University. Rehab Society

  • CA QUA01848
  • Collectivité
  • n.d.

Formed in 1967, the Society represents the students of the School of Rehabilitation Therapy in their dealings with the faculty, administration, and general community. Representations also sit on the Senate, the Alma Mater Society, and various Canadian professional associations. The Society promotes student participation in the community through numerous charitable fund-raising activities.

Limestone District School Board

  • CA QUA01852
  • Collectivité
  • n.d.

Formerly known as the Frontenac County Board of Education, the Limestone District School Board (its name changed at the time of the province-wide amalgamation process in 1999), serves approximately 23,000 students in 55 elementary, and 11 secondary schools, in the Townships of Central Frontenac, Addington Highlands, North Frontenac, South Frontenac,and Loyalist MIlls; as well as the Town of Greater Napenee, and the City of Greater Kingston. The Board, with its central offices located at 220 Portsmouth Avenue, in Kingston, Ontario, is also responsible for the Limestone School of Community Education.

Stock, Marie

  • CA QUA01853
  • Personne
  • n.d.

Toronto, Ont.

Shepard, Ralph K.

  • CA QUA01858
  • Personne
  • d. 1933

Ralph K. Shepard, an architect based in Toronto, Ontario, entered into partnership with Dexter Delano Calvin in 1913. Over the ensuing years they designed numerous commercial, financial, residential,and educational buildings. Included in this long list is nearly thirty banks in various Canadian provinces, the Brock Building, the Toronto Conservatory of Music, and the Ban Righ Women's Residence and the Douglas Library at Queen's University at Kingston. The firm dissolved upon the death of R.K. Shepard in 1933.

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