Robert L. Holmes

American philosopher
Robert L. Holmes
Born (1935-12-28) December 28, 1935 (age 88)
Occupation(s)Professor, Scholar
Known forEthics
Political Philosophy
Board member ofFellowship of Reconciliation
AwardsNational Humanitites Institute Fellowship
Fulbright Fellowship
Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies Fellowship
Academic background
Alma materHarvard University
University of Michigan
Academic work
Sub-disciplinePhilosophy of Nonviolence
InstitutionsUniversity of Rochester

Robert L. Holmes (December 28, 1935) is a Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Rochester, and an expert on issues of peace and nonviolence. Holmes specializes in ethics, and in social and political philosophy. He has written numerous articles and several books on those topics, and has been invited to address national and international conferences.

Early life

Holmes earned his undergraduate degree from Harvard University and Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Michigan.[1][2]

Career

The Rush Rhees Library at University of Rochester, as seen from the Eastman Quadrangle.

Holmes joined the faculty at the University of Rochester in 1962.[3] By 1976 he acquired a fellowship at the National Humanities Institute at Yale University. Subsequently in 1983 he was appointed Senior Fulbright Lecturer at Moscow State university. He also served as a Faculty Fellow at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame in 1993.[4] In 1998, Holmes was appointed to the newly established Rajiv Gandhi Chair in Peace and Disarmament at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, India, where he shaped the mission of the chair on instruction, research, and lectures.[5]

While serving on the faculty at the University of Rochester, his lectures were always eagerly anticipated by students of the humanities as well as the sciences. He received the Edward Peck Curtis Award for Undergraduate Teaching in 2001 and the Professor of the Year Award in Humanities in 2006. At the 2007 convocation ceremony, Holmes was awarded the Goergen Award for Distinguished Achievement and Artistry in Undergraduate Teaching. Also, Holmes is known for being one of the very few professors to receive perfect or near perfect reviews every year since the university began student review services in 2001.[6]

During the course of an academic career which has spanned over forty years, Holmes has held a variety of scholarly positions including: Fulbright Fellow at Moscow State University and visiting professor at Notre Dame, Hamilton College and the University of Texas at Austin. In addition, he served as an editor of the philosophical journal Public Affairs Quarterly, contributed to the editorial review board of Social Theory and Practice [7] and participated on the national board of the Fellowship of Reconciliation.[8] He was also a longtime adviser to the University of Rochester Undergraduate Philosophy Council.[9] In 1992 he also served as president of the professional organization Concerned Philosophers for Peace which strives to improve international understanding and peace through scholarly analysis of the causes of war.[10]

External image
image icon Photograph of Professor Robert L. Holmes at the University of Rochester on
Rochester.edu

Holmes is the author of several comprehensive texts on the subject of moral philosophy. Included among his publications is a collaborative work undertaken in 1968 with Lewis White Beck - a noted scholar on Kantian ethics (Philosophical Inquiry: An Introduction to Philosophy).[11][12] Subsequently, in 2001 he served as a contributory author to the book Kant's Legacy: Essays in Honor of Lewis White Beck with an essay on Consequentialism and Its Consequences.[13] He also coauthored a work in 2005 with Barry L. Gan - Director of the Center for Nonviolence at St. Bonaventure University (Nonviolence in Theory and Practice).[14][15] In addition, he has published numerous papers in several academic peer-reviewed journals including: Analysis, Ethics, International Philosophical Quarterly, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, Journal of Value Inquiry, Mind, The Monist, The Philosophical Forum, and The Review of Metaphysics.[16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25]

As of 2009, Holmes is semi-retired, although he still teaches at the University of Rochester during some semesters.[26]

Moral philosophy

Over the course of the past forty years, Holmes has addressed several interrelated moral dilemmas posed in the modern age including terrorism, nuclear deterrence and armed conflict in general. In his book On War and Morality (1989) he offers a robust philosophical defense of pacifism and its application in a world which is plagued with recurrent outbursts of international violence despite its adherence to upholding the principles of nuclear deterrence and mutually assured destruction (MAD) since the emergence of the cold war era. Holmes rejects a reliance upon such an irrational set pf principles and dismisses them as morally wrong. Instead, he advances a form of "moral personalism" based upon the maxim that any intelligible moral theory must include an abiding interest in the lives and well being of all people. In his view, violence is a form of abrogation of this maxim which is prima facia wrong and that Just War Theories in general are inadequate to the task of surmounting such a moral presumption. Even if a war is considered "just" in accordance with the standards of jus ad ballo" or jus in bello" , it may not be deemed morally acceptable based upon a consideration of the organized violence which it engenders in the modern world.[27][28][29][30]

Holmes offers a systematic critical review of the two major schools of thought which claim to defend warfare in the modern world. In the first group are the "positivistic relists" who claim that concepts of "right" or "wrong" are irrelevant in international affairs and the "normative realists" who claim that moral considerations should not be permitted to play a role in determining foreign policy. Holmes dismisses the later by observing that they have misread the history of the twentieth century by suggesting the Wilsonian idealism inevitably led to the onset of World War II and confuse morality with moralism.[31][32][33][34]

In the second group, Holmes identifies the defenders of just war theories. Holmes rejects their attempts to justify the taking of innocent human lives in order to save other innocent human lives as morally unjustifiable in so far as both killing and any appeal to violence is morally unjustified in the first place, despite the consequences which may follow from such an act. Even if a war is considered "just" in accordance with the standards of jus ad ballo or jus in bello, it may not be deemed morally acceptable based upon a consideration of the organized violence which it engenders in the modern world[35][36][37][38]

With this in mind, Holmes outlines a four stage argument to support the view that warfare is unjustified even within the context of modern world conditions. First he observes that warfare in general cannot be justified if the means of waging the war are, when taken by themselves, also morally unjustified. Secondly, he contends that modern warfare by its very nature inevitably involves the killing of innocent people. Thirdly, he denies that the presumption against killing innocent people can be overridden by conditions related to the waging of war. Lastly, he identifies nonviolence as an embodiment of a viable alternative to warfare. Specifically, he outlines a Gandhian approach to resolving conflicts, which rejects the utilization of mutual concessions in order to achieve a provisional or temporary standoff between the waring parties. This is replaced with a process of actively creating peace through negotiations which engender mutual progress for all parties involved in the conflict. Taken together, these arguments suggest that an appeal to nonviolence is a viable ethical alternative even within the modern world.[39][40][41][42]

Publications

External videos
video icon You may preview selections from Holmes' book The Ethics of Nonviolence - Essays by Robert L. Holmes on books.google.com

Texts

Included among Robert L. Holmes publications are the following texts:

  • Basic Moral Philosophy by Robert L. Holmes[43][44]
  • Introduction to Applied Ethics by Robert L. Holmes [45]
  • Kant's Legacy: Essays in Honor of Lewis White Beck Editor: Predrag Cicovacki. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes -"Consequentialism and its Consequences".[46]
  • Nonviolence in Theory and Practice by Robert L. Holmes and Barry L. Gan [47]
  • On War and Morality by Robert L. Holmes [48]
  • Philosophic Inquiry: An Introduction to Philosophy by Lewis White Beck and Robert L. Holmes [49]
  • Pacifism: A Philosophy of Nonviolence by Robert L. Holmes[50]
  • The Ethics of Nonviolence - Essays by Robert L. Holmes Editor: Predrag Cicovacki, Bloomsbury, USA on books.google.com[51][52]
  • The Augustinian Tradition Editor: Gareth B. Matthews. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes - "St. Augustine and the Just War Theory"[53]

Journal articles

Selected peer-reviewed articles published by Robert L. Holmes include:[54]

See also

Portal:
  • Philosophy

References

  1. ^ University of Rochester - Faculty - Robert L. Holmes Professor Emeritus Professor of Philosophy - PhD. University of Michigan on sas.rochester.edu
  2. ^ "Currents--November 9, 1998". www.rochester.edu. Retrieved 2016-12-05.
  3. ^ "Currents--November 9, 1998". www.rochester.edu. Retrieved 2016-12-05.
  4. ^ Eye of the Storm: Regional Conflicts and the Philosophy of Peace. Kaplan, Laura Duhan & Bove, Laurence F. Editors. Verlag Ferdinand Schoningh Publishers 1995 & 2022 p. 319 Biography of contributing author Robert L. Holmes on google books
  5. ^ "Currents--November 9, 1998". www.rochester.edu. Retrieved 2016-12-05.
  6. ^ "St. Bonaventure University - Noted Expert on Nonviolence to talk about social inequality Thursday at St. Bonaventure" - Robert L. Holmes Biography on sbu.edu
  7. ^ Social Theory and Practice Vol. 19 Florida State University - Dept. of Philosophy 1993 p. 114 Robert Holmes & Social theory and Practice on books.google.com
  8. ^ The Augustinian Tradition Editor: Gereth B. Matthews. University of California Press, Berkeley, 1999 p. 384 ISBN 0-520-20999-0
  9. ^ "St. Bonaventure University - Noted Expert on Nonviolence to talk about social inequality Thursday at St. Bonaventure" - Robert L. Holmes Biography on sbu.edu
  10. ^ Concerned Philosophers for Peace - Officers- Presidents on peacephilosophy.org
  11. ^ Philosophical Inquiry: An Introduction to Philosophy Lewis White beck and Robert L. Holmes. Prentice Hall, 1968 on books.google.com
  12. ^ "Philosopher, Scholar Lewis White Beck Dies" on Rochester.edu.news]
  13. ^ Kant's Legacy: Essays in Honor of Lewis White Beck Editor: Predrag Cicovacki. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes -"Consequentialism and Its Consequences", University of Rochester Press, 2001 p. xii, pp. 227-244 "Consequentialism and Its Consequences" ISBN 1-58046-053-4 Robert L. Holmes on books.google.com
  14. ^ St. Bonaventure University Profiles - Barry L. Gan: Director of the Center for Nonviolence on sbu.edu
  15. ^ Nonviolence in Theory and Practice by Robert L. Holmes and Barry L. Gan Waveland Press 2005 on books.google.com
  16. ^ Robert L. Holmes on scholar.google.com
  17. ^ The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy - "The Limited Relevance of Analytical Ethics to the Problems of Bioethics" Robert L. Holmes. Oxford Academic Vol. 15 No. 2 April 1990 p. 143-159 on scholar.google.com
  18. ^ Analysis - "Is Morality a System of Hypothetical Imperative" Robert L. Holmes Oxford University Press Vol 34 No. 3 January 1974 p. 96-100 on scholar.google.com
  19. ^ The Philosophical Forum Quarterly- "The Metaethics of Pacifism and Just War Theory" Robert L. Holmes. Wiley-Blackwell January 27, 2015 p. 2-15 on scholar.google.com
  20. ^ The Review of Metaphysics - "John Dewey's Moral Philosophy in Contemporary Perspective" Robert L. Holmes. Philosophy Education Society. Vol 20. No. 1 September 1966 p. 42-70 on scholar.google.com
  21. ^ The Journal of Value Inquiry - "John Dewey's Social Ethics" Robert L. Holmes. Vol. 7 No. 4 December 1973 p. 274-280 on scholar.google.com
  22. ^ The Monist - "The Development of John Dewey's Ethical Thought"Philosophy Documentation Center Vol. 48 No. 3 July 1964 p. 392-406 on scholar.google.com
  23. ^ Ethics - "University Neutrality and ROTC"Robert L. Holmes. University of Chicago Press Vol. 83 No. 3 April 1973 p. 177 on scholar.google.com
  24. ^ International Philosophical Quarterly - "Just War: Principles and Causes" Robert L. Holmes. Philosophy Documentation Center Vol 37 No. 4 December 1997 p. 483-484 on scholar.google.com
  25. ^ Mind - "The Case Against Ethical Naturalism" Robert L. Holmes. Oxford University Press Vol 73 N. 290 April 1964 p. 291-295 on scholar.google.com
  26. ^ University of Rochester - Faculty - Robert L. Holmes Professor Emeritus Professor of Philosophy on sas.rochester.edu
  27. ^ The Philosophical Review Vol 101, No. 2 (April 1992) Duke University Press pp. 481-484 On War and Morality Holmes, Robert L. Book reviewed by Diana T. Meyers, University of Connecticut, Starrs. Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  28. ^ The American Political Science Review, December 1989, Vol 83, No. 4 (Dec. 1989), American Political Science Association Publsiher pp. 1447-1448 Book Review: "On War and Morality by Robert L. Holmes" reviewed by Stephen R. Rock, Vassar College Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  29. ^ Nous, Dec., 1992, Vol. 26, No. 4 (Dec., 1992) Wiley Publishing pp. 559-562 Book Review: '"On War and Morality" by Robert L. Holmes by Steven Lee, Hobart and Smith Colleges. on JSTOR
  30. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence: Essay by Robert L. Holmes - Book blurb on google.books.com
  31. ^ The Philosophical Review Vol 101, No. 2 (April 1992) Duke University Press pp. 481-484 On War and Morality Holmes, Robert L. Book reviewed by Diana T. Meyers, University of Connecticut, Starrs. Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  32. ^ The American Political Science Review, December 1989, Vol 83, No. 4 (Dec. 1989), American Political Science Association Publisher pp. 1447-1448 Book Review: "On War and Morality by Robert L. Holmes" reviewed by Stephen R. Rock, Vassar College Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  33. ^ Nous, Dec., 1992, Vol. 26, No. 4 (Dec., 1992) Wiley Publishing pp. 559-562 Book Review: On War and Morality" by Robert L. Holmes by Steven Lee, Hobart and Smith Colleges. on JSTOR
  34. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence: Essay by Robert L. Holmes - Book blurb on google.books.com
  35. ^ The Philosophical Review Vol 101, No. 2 (April 1992) Duke University Press pp. 481-484 On War and Morality Holmes, Robert L. Book reviewed by Diana T. Meyers, University of Connecticut, Starrs. Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  36. ^ The American Political Science Review, December 1989, Vol 83, No. 4 (Dec. 1989), American Political Science Association Publisher pp. 1447-1448 Book Review: "On War and Morality by Robert L. Holmes" reviewed by Stephen R. Rock, Vassar College Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  37. ^ Nous, Dec., 1992, Vol. 26, No. 4 (Dec., 1992) Wiley Publishing pp. 559-562 Book Review: "On War and Morality" by Robert L. Holmes by Steven Lee, Hobart and Smith Colleges. on JSTOR
  38. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence: Essay by Robert L. Holmes - Book blurb on google.books.com
  39. ^ The Philosophical Review Vol 101, No. 2 (April 1992) Duke University Press pp. 481-484 On War and Morality Holmes, Robert L. Book reviewed by Diana T. Meyers, University of Connecticut, Starrs Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  40. ^ Nous, Dec., 1992, Vol. 26, No. 4 (Dec., 1992) Wiley Publishing pp. 559-562 Book Review: "On War and Morality" by Robert L. Holmes by Steven Lee, Hobart and Smith Colleges. on JSTOR
  41. ^ The American Political Science Review, December 1989, Vol 83, No. 4 (Dec. 1989), American Political Science Association Publisher. pp. 1447-1448 Book Review: "On War and Morality by Robert L. Holmes" reviewed by Stephen R. Rock, Vassar College Robert L. Holmes on JSTOR
  42. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence: Essay by Robert L. Holmes - Book blurb on google.books.com
  43. ^ Ghiraldelli, Paulo Jr. (February 2008). Contemporary pragmatism. Rodopi. pp. 111–. ISBN 978-90-420-2371-0. Retrieved 9 August 2011.
  44. ^ Basic Moral Philosophy. Robert L. Holmes. Holly J. Allen - Wadsworth Cengage Learning, CA, 2007 ISBN 978-0-495-00797-5 on books.google.com
  45. ^ Introduction to Applied Ethics Robert L.Holmes. Bloomsbury, New York 2018 on books.google.com
  46. ^ Kant's Legacy: Essays in Honor of Lewis White Beck Editor: Predrag Cicovacki. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes -"Consequentialism and its Consequences", University of Rochester Press, 2001 p. xii, p. 227ISBN 1-58046-053-4 on books.google.com
  47. ^ Nonviolence in Theory and Practice by Robert L. Holmes and Barry L. Gan Waveland Press, 2005 on books.google.com
  48. ^ On War and Morality Robert L. Holmes. Princeton University Press 1989 ISBN 0-691-07794-0 on books.google.com
  49. ^ Philosophica Inquiry: An Introduction to Philosophy Lewis White beck and Robert L. Holmes. Prentice Hall, 1968 on books.google.com
  50. ^ Holmes, Robert L. (December 2016). Paficism: A Philosophy of Nonviolence. Bloomsbury. pp. 368–. ISBN 978-1-4742-7983-3. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  51. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence - Essays by Robert L. Holmes Editor: Predrag Cicovacki Bloomsbury Academic, New York 2013 on books.google.com
  52. ^ The Ethics of Nonviolence: Essays by Robert L. Holmes overview on books.google.com
  53. ^ The Augustinian Tradition Editor: Gareth B. Matthews. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes - "St. Augustine and the Just War Theory" University of California Press, London, 1999 p. 323 ISBN 0-520-20999-0 on books.google.com
  54. ^ Robert L. Holmes on scholar.google.com
  55. ^ The Philosophical Forum Quarterly- "The Metaethics of Pacifism and Just War Theory" Robert L. Holmes. Wiley-Blackwell January 27, 2015 p. 2-15 on scholar.google.com
  56. ^ International Philosophical Quarterly - "Just War: Principles and Causes" Robert L. Holmes. Philosophy Documentation Center Vol 37 No. 4 December 1997 p. 483-484 on scholar.google.com
  57. ^ The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy - "The Limited Relevance of Analytical Ethics to the Problems of Bioethics" Robert L. Holmes. Oxford Academic Vol. 15 No. 2 April 1990 p. 143-159 on scholar.google.com
  58. ^ Analysis - "Is Morality a System of Hypothetical Imperatives?" Robert L. Holmes Oxford University Press Vol 34 No. 3 January 1974 p. 96-100 on scholar.google.com
  59. ^ Ethics - "University Neutrality and ROTC"Robert L. Holmes. University of Chicago Press Vol. 83 No. 3 April 1973 p. 177 on scholar.google.com
  60. ^ The Journal of Value Inquiry - "John Dewey's Social Ethics" Robert L. Holmes. Vol. 7 No. 4 December 1973 p. 274-280 on scholar.google.com
  61. ^ The Review of Metaphysics - "John Dewey's Moral Philosophy in Contemporary Perspective" Robert L. Holmes. Philosophy Education Society. Vol 20. No. 1 September 1966 p. 42-70 on scholar.google.com
  62. ^ The Monist - "The Development of John Dewey's Ethical Thought"Philosophy Documentation Center Vol. 48 No. 3 July 1964 p. 392-406 on scholar.google.com
  63. ^ Mind - "The Case Against Ethical Naturalism" Robert L. Holmes. Oxford University Press Vol 73 N. 290 April 1964 p. 291-295 on scholar.google.com

External links

  • Basic Moral Philosophy by Robert L. Holmes on books.google.com
  • On War and Morality by Robert L. Holmes on books.google.com
  • The Ethics of Nonviolence - Essays by Robert L. Holmes Editor: Predrag Cicovacki on books.google.com
  • Introduction to Applied Ethics by Robert L.Holmes on books.google.com
  • Kant's Legacy: Essays in Honor of Lewis White Beck Editor: Predrag Cicovacki. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes -"Consequentialism and its Consequences" on books.google.com
  • The Augustinian Tradition Editor: Gareth B. Matthews. Contributor: Robert L. Holmes - "St. Augustine and the Just War Theory" on books.google.com
  • Robert L. Holmes on worldcat.org
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