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Yorick Smythies (21 February 1917 – 1980) was a student and friend of
Ludwig Wittgenstein Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein ( ; ; 26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian philosopher who worked primarily in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language. From 1929 to 1947, Witt ...
known for his notes of the philosopher's lectures. He was also a friend of, and character inspiration for, the novelist (and philosopher) Iris Murdoch.


Life


Childhood

Yorick Smythies was born on 21 February 1917 in
Shanklin Shanklin () is a seaside resort town and civil parishes in England, civil parish on the Isle of Wight, England, located on Sandown Bay. Shanklin is the southernmost of three settlements which occupy the bay, and is close to Lake, Isle of Wight, ...
on the
Isle of Wight The Isle of Wight (Help:IPA/English, /waɪt/ Help:Pronunciation respelling key, ''WYTE'') is an island off the south coast of England which, together with its surrounding uninhabited islets and Skerry, skerries, is also a ceremonial county. T ...
where Yorick's maternal grandparents were living at the time.''Aeronautics''. King Sell & Olding, Limited. 8 March 1916.
"An engagement is announced between Captain B. E. Smythies,
Royal Engineers The Corps of Royal Engineers, usually called the Royal Engineers (RE), and commonly known as the ''Sappers'', is the engineering arm of the British Army. It provides military engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces ...
and
Royal Flying Corps The Royal Flying Corps (RFC) was the air arm of the British Army before and during the First World War until it merged with the Royal Naval Air Service on 1 April 1918 to form the Royal Air Force. During the early part of the war, the RFC sup ...
, son of Mr. and Mrs A. Smythies of Dolton, North Devon, and Kate Marjorie ("Joe"), younger daughter of Mr and Mrs. W. A. Gouldsmith, of The Bungalow, Shanklin, Isle of Wight." ''The Aeroplane,'' Temple Press, v.10 1916]
Yorick was the first child of Kate Marjorie "Joe" Smythies ''née'' Gouldsmith, (1892–1975) and Commander#Royal Air Force, Cmdr Bernard Edward Smythies DFC who had been born in 1886 in Dehradun, India. Bernard, the younger brother of E. A. Smythies and elder brother of Richard Dawkins' paternal grandmother Enid, was a decorated RAF pilot who was killed in a flying accident at North Weald Airfield on 17 June 1930. As well as being survived by his wife, son, and brother, Bernard "Bunny" Smythies would be survived by his father Arthur Smythies (1847- 1934) and by his daughter, Yorick's younger sister. Yorick was educated at Harrow.
King's College, Cambridge Annual Report 2008
', pp. 206-206


University

Smythies began the Moral Sciences
Tripos TRIPOS (''TRIvial Portable Operating System'') is a computer operating system. Development started in 1976 at the Computer Laboratory of Cambridge University and it was headed by Dr. Martin Richards. The first version appeared in January 1978 a ...
at King's College, Cambridge in 1935, graduating with a First in philosophy in 1939. Smythies attended, and took detailed notes of, Max Newman's 1935 lecture course on logic. Smythies also attended Wittgenstein's lectures in the academic year 1935/36 but (Wittgenstein not normally allowing students to take them in class) his notes of those lectures are sketchy. Wittgenstein was absent from Cambridge academic life from the autumn of 1936. He returned in early 1938 and Smythies began to take more detailed notes of his lectures from that year. And (although Smythies completed his formal studies in 1939) he continued to do so through the academic year of 1939/1940 and took some further notes during a temporary return to Cambridge between late 1940 and early 1941. (Though Smythies attended lectures by Wittgenstein between 1945 and 1947, according to Volker A. Munz, he "seems to have made little or no notes" during this last period of Wittgenstein's professorship.) Being one of the few students Wittgenstein allowed to take lecture notes (and, at times, the only one), his notes became key sources for the reconstruction of Wittgenstein's lectures. During his lifetime, some of Smythies' notes were incorporated into ''Lectures and Conversations on Aesthetics, Psychology and Religious Belief'' (1966) and ''Lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics'' (1976) both being works edited by others. Further notes of Wittgenstein's lectures taken by Smythies were published in 1988 as ''Lectures on Freedom of the Will.'' However, a large body of notes, mostly from the period 1938 to 1940, which Smythies called the ''Whewell's Court Lectures'' (after the location at
Trinity College, Cambridge Trinity College is a Colleges of the University of Cambridge, constituent college of the University of Cambridge. Founded in 1546 by King Henry VIII, Trinity is one of the largest Cambridge colleges, with the largest financial endowment of any ...
where Wittgenstein's lectures were held) were only published in 2017 under the editorship of Volker A. Munz and his assistant Bernhard Ritter. Smythies also became a close friend to Wittgenstein. They conducted an intense written correspondence (most of it now thought lost). And Smythies was, with a few other former students, at Wittgenstein's bedside around the time of his death. Smythies delivered talks to the Cambridge Moral Sciences Club, and taught philosophy part-time at Oxford in 1944 (on the philosophy of
George Berkeley George Berkeley ( ; 12 March 168514 January 1753), known as Bishop Berkeley (Bishop of Cloyne of the Anglican Church of Ireland), was an Anglo-Irish philosopher, writer, and clergyman who is regarded as the founder of "immaterialism", a philos ...
). Oets Kolk Bouwsma recalls Wittgenstein saying, in a 1949 conversation at Cornell, that "Smythies will never get a lectureship. He is too serious." And, indeed, though Smythies did go on to teach philosophy for Oxford's Advanced Student Summer Courses between 1955 and 1957, he never became a professional lecturer and worked mainly as a librarian (latterly at the department of social studies at the
University of Oxford The University of Oxford is a collegiate university, collegiate research university in Oxford, England. There is evidence of teaching as early as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the List of oldest un ...
). And although he wrote philosophy of his own, some intended for publication, only a review of
Bertrand Russell Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell, (18 May 1872 – 2 February 1970) was a British philosopher, logician, mathematician, and public intellectual. He had influence on mathematics, logic, set theory, and various areas of analytic ...
's '' History of Western Philosophy'' is known to have been published during his lifetime. Smythies' review of the ''History'' was, as Ray Monk records, particularly "scathing" (and one Russell kept a copy of). Wittgenstein told Smythies he had read the review, writing "and it isn’t bad."


Religion

Like G.E.M. Anscombe, Smythies was a convert to Catholicism. Though Wittgenstein had been raised a Catholic, he was not a religious believer and said "I could not possibly bring myself to believe all the things that they believe." Wittgenstein reported, to Maurice Drury, that he felt partly responsible for Smythies' religious conversion because he had advised Smythies to read Kierkegaard. Wittgenstein wrote to Smythies in 1944 thus:
Deciding to become a Christian is like deciding to give up walking on the ground and do tight-rope walking instead, where nothing is more easy than to slip and every slip can be fatal. … I cannot applaud your decision to go in for rope walking, because I have always stayed on the ground myself, I have no right to encourage another man in such an enterprise. … I’m really interested in what sort of a man you are and will be. This will, for me, be the eating of the pudding.


Mental Health

Ray Monk's claim (repeated by Peter J. Conradi and Valerie Purton) that Smythies suffered from (paranoid)
schizophrenia Schizophrenia () is a mental disorder characterized variously by hallucinations (typically, Auditory hallucination#Schizophrenia, hearing voices), delusions, thought disorder, disorganized thinking and behavior, and Reduced affect display, f ...
is disputed by Volker A. Munz. Neither Monk nor Munz offer any explanation for why Smythies might been thought to suffer from this condition, nor, accordingly, does Munz offer any alternative diagnosis. Conradi however identifies a "schizophrenic breakdown" as the cause of Yorick 'hiding behind trees' and "making strange utterances" and mentions time spent by him in a mental hospital. An explanation is offered by Yorick's first cousin, the neuropsychiatrist J. R. Smythies who, also disputing Monk's claims of schizophrenia, claimed that, prescribed
amphetamine Amphetamine (contracted from Alpha and beta carbon, alpha-methylphenethylamine, methylphenethylamine) is a central nervous system (CNS) stimulant that is used in the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), narcolepsy, an ...
s for depression, Yorick Smythies became dependent on them and subsequently developed a "wholly iatrogenic" chronic paranoid amphetamine psychosis. According to Frank Cioffi, Smythies consulted the psychiatrist Maurice O'Connor Drury about his "schizophrenic episodes".


Marriages

Smythies married his first wife Diana Pollard (known as 'Polly') in 1944, in Oxford. Diana was the daughter of the British Intelligence officer Hugh Pollard and had, aged eighteen, accompanied her father in posing as tourists to 'camouflage' the covert flight from England that collected General Franco from his 'semi-banishment' in the Canary Islands and took him to Spanish Morocco in 1936. The marriage would end in divorce but Diana continued to live in North Oxford until her death in 2003. In 1974 Smythies married his second wife, Margaret 'Peg' Smythies ''née'' Britton (the ex-wife of Barry Pink, a friend to both Wittgenstein and Yorick) by whom Yorick had already had a son Daniel in 1963. Peg would survive Yorick and go on to marry another friend and former student of Wittgenstein, the philosopher Rush Rhees. Peg would also survive Rhees (who died in 1989) dying in May 2014 having lived latterly in Amberley, Gloucestershire, near
Stroud Stroud is a market town and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England. It is the main town in Stroud District. The town's population was 13,500 in 2021. Sited below the western escarpment of the Cotswold Hills, at the meeting point of the ...
.


Death

Volker A. Munz, insists (contrary to the claims of Ray Monk) that "there were no tragic circumstances" surrounding Smythies death, reporting: "Having been afflicted with emphisema for about five years and knowing not to live much longer he died in 1980." Yorick is registered as dying late that year, in, or near, Chipping Norton.


In literature

Smythies was the basis for the character Hugo Belfounder in the novel '' Under the Net'' (1954) by Iris Murdoch. When Smythies died in 1980 Murdoch wrote the character's death into her novel '' The Philosopher's Pupil'' which she was then composing.


References


Further reading

* Peter J. Conradi, '' Iris Murdoch: A Life'' (Harper Collins, 2001)


External links


Yorick Smythies (1917–1980)
by Volker A. Munz and Bernhard Ritter (''Wittgenstein's Whewell's Court Lectures'' project)
Front Matter
(including the Preface and Editorial Introduction) to
Wittgenstein's Whewell's Court Lectures: Cambridge, 1938–1941, From the Notes by Yorick Smythies
'' (2017) Volker A. Munz and Bernhard Ritter (ed.)
Lectures on Knowledge ⟨Easter Term 1938)
''Wittgenstein's Whewell's Court Lectures: Cambridge, 1938–1941, From the Notes by Yorick Smythies,'' (2017) Volker A. Munz and Bernhard Ritter (ed.)
Yorick Smythies' review of Russell's ''History''
* Conradi, Peter J. “Did Iris Murdoch Draw From Life?” In ''Iris Murdoch Newsletter'', 15, 2001, 4–7. in: '' Murdoch Newsletters 12–19'' * Hustwit, Ronald E. Sr. and Bouwsma, O.K.
"Bouwsma’s Commonplace Book Notes On Yorick Smythies And Related Papers:Assembled, Edited, and Introduced by Ronald E. Hustwit Sr."
(2023). O.K. Bouwsma Collection. 3 {{DEFAULTSORT:Smythies, Yorick 1917 births 1980 deaths Alumni of King's College, Cambridge People educated at Harrow School People from Shanklin 20th-century English philosophers English librarians