Adolphe Garnier (27 March 1801 – 4 May 1864) was a French academic philosopher, the main disciple and continuator of Théodore Jouffroy.
He studied at the Collège Bourbon, where he had Jouffroy as a teacher and won the first prize in philosophy in the concours général. He later became a lawyer while contributing to several literary and philosophical collections.
In 1827, he published a pamphlet on the death penalty that drew attention to him and brought him back to philosophy. After passing the agrégation in philosophy in 1827,[1] he taught in Versailles, then in the Parisian colleges of Saint Louis (from 1833), Louis-le-Grand (from 1835 to 1838), and Henri-IV (1840–1841) as well as at the École normale supérieure (1834–1835).
On May 25, 1840, Garnier defended his two theses for the Doctorate of Letters at the University of Paris.[2] The first, in French, is a critique of the philosophy of Thomas Reid.[3] The second, in Latin, is a reflection on poetry.[4]
He was appointed assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Paris Faculty of Letters in 1842, then succeeded Jouffroy in the chair of dogmatic philosophy in 1845 in this university. He was elected a member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques in 1860.
His work on Social Morality was awarded a Montyon Prize in 1850. His Treatise on the Faculties of the Soul, considered his most important work, earned him his second Montyon Prize in 1853 and was hailed by the Revue des Deux Mondes as "the best monument of psychological science of our time".[5] He also contributed to Le Globe.
He is buried in the Montmartre Cemetery.