Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wzw2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-17T20:37:05.239Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

John Caird‐Theologian and Philosopher

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Extract

John Henry Muirhead once said that British Idealism was from the first in essence a philosophy of religion. He saw it as an appeal to the ideas of the German Post-Kantians for the purpose of defending religious belief against the many new challenges mounted to it during the second half of the nineteenth century, challenges which had rendered untenable the less critical faith of preceding generations. Muirhead’s interpretation could be disputed, for it is not clear that it accurately describes the principal motivation of all members of the British Idealist school, but if there is truth in it, and I think that there is, nowhere is this more so than in the case of the Scottish theologian and philosopher, John Caird, for Caird’s entire oeuvre revolved around the project of reconciling Christianity and Idealism.

A celebrated preacher, then innovative professor of theology and finally much respected Principal of Glasgow University, John Caird was in his time a well-known and highly regarded figure. Today however his work is almost entirely forgotten, along with that of many others in the idealist movement; such ways of thinking having passed from favour as completely as they once held dominance of the intellectual scene. Yet we run the risk of misunderstanding our history, and thus our own present, if we insist on simply turning our faces from certain eras of thought or movements of ideas and deeming them fallow or uninteresting. For that way we simply construct a history which reflects our current prejudices but never can challenge them. In this paper I shall outline the work of John Caird in an attempt to show why it deserves to be remembered, but first let me provide just a few biographical details.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1999 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

I use the following abbreviations to works by Caird in this paper: I = An Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion; F = The Fundamental ideas of Christianity (two vols.); UA = Universiry Addresses; US = University Sermons; ESR = Essays for Sunday Reading.

References

REFERENCES

Caird, E., ‘Memoir of Principal Caird’, prefixed to J. Caird, The Fundamental Ideas of Christianity.Google Scholar
Caird, J., An Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion, Glasgow: James MacLehose & sons, 1880.Google Scholar
Caird, J., University Addresses, Glasgow: James MacLehose & sons, 1898.Google Scholar
Caird, J., University Sermons, Glasgow: James MacLehose & sons, 1898.Google Scholar
Caird, J., The Fundamental Ideas of Christianity, Glasgow: James MacLehose & sons, 1899, two volumes.Google Scholar
Caird, J., Essays for Sunday Reading, London: I. Pitman & sons, 1906.Google Scholar
Cheyne, A., Caird, John (18201898) Preacher, Professor, Principal’, in Hazlett, Ian (ed.), Traditions of Theology in Glasgow, Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Jones, H., Principal Caird: An Address delivered to the Students of the Moral Philosophy Class on the Opening of the Session 1898–99, Glasgow: James MacLehose & sons, 1898.Google Scholar
Long, E. T., ‘The Gifford Lectures and the Glasgow Hegelians’, The Review of Metaphysics, 43, 1989, pp. 357–84.Google Scholar
Muirhead, J. H., The Platonic Tradition in Anglo‐Saxon Philosophy, London: George Allen & Unwin, 1931.Google Scholar
Sell, A. P. F., Defending and Declaring the Faith: Some Scottish Examples 1860–1920, Exeter: The Paternoster Press, 1987.Google Scholar
Warr, C. L., Principal Caird, Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1926.Google Scholar